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  • Several hundred girls are unaccounted for after armed bandits raided a school in northwestern Nigeria, a teacher says. Their disappearance raises fears that Nigeria has been hit by another mass kidnapping -- the hallmark of criminal gangs and extremist Islamist groups. A timeline: Boko Haram gunmen seize 276 girls aged between 12 and 17 from the Government Girls Secondary School in the remote town of Chibok in northeastern Borno state on April 14, 2014. The girls are forced from their dormitories onto trucks and driven into the bush. Fifty-seven manage to flee in a daring escape. Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau claims responsibility in a video and vows to sell the girls as slave brides. Boko Haram says they have converted to Islam and will not be released unless militant fighters held in custody are freed. An international outcry follows with a campaign demanding the girls' release backed by A-list celebrities and politicians, with the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls going viral. In April 2016, on the eve of the abduction's second anniversary, a "proof of life" video emerges showing 15 of the girls in black hijabs. The following month the Nigerian army confirms the first of the schoolgirls has been found. Aged 19, she has a four-month-old baby and is found with a man she describes as her husband near Boko Haram's Sambisa forest enclave. In October, 21 of the girls are freed following talks brokered by Switzerland and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). Local sources say four jihadist prisoners were freed in return. In May 2017 another 82 girls are released in exchange for five Boko Haram commanders. Later that month, Boko Haram release a video in which a woman in a black veil claiming to be one of the Chibok girls brandishes a gun and proclaims loyalty to the group. In all, 107 of the 219 held since 2014 have either escaped or been released. Some of the young women are now studying at the American University of Nigeria in Yola, although others had to drop out of education because their poverty-striken families could not afford to pay for transport, food or even their sanitary towels. In February 2018 the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), an offshoot of Boko Haram, snatches 111 girls from their boarding school in the northeastern town of Dapchi, around 300 kilometres (186 miles) from Chibok. The jihadists return more than 100 girls to the town on March 21 after talks with the government. Five of their schoolmates reportedly died in captivity. The group refused to free Leah Sharibu, then 15, as she would not convert to Islam. The only Christian among the hostages, she still remains in captivity three years on. On December 11 2020, more than 100 gunmen on motorcycles storm the all-boys Government Science Secondary School in the town of Kankara, in Katsina state, seizing 300 students. The attack is initially blamed on armed criminals before Boko Haram -- which operates hundreds of kilometres (miles) away -- claimed responsibility. The boys are later released after talks with government officials. Armed bandits raid a school dormitory in Jangebe in northwestern Zamfara state overnight Thursday, a teacher and a parent tell AFP. More than 300 girls are missing, the teacher says. The attack comes just a week after gunmen stormed a school in neighbouring Niger state, killing one student and kidnapping 42 pupils, teachers and relatives. bur-fg/lh/ri
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  • Nigeria: Mass kidnappings that shock the world
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