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Perils of school abductions

For the families of the kids picked off from their school by bandits in Tegina, Niger State, and finally released after eighty-nine days in captivity, the terror was   real, raw and rasping. They were all over the place for months trying to scale the mountain put before them by ruthless criminals. It was heart wrenching to note that some of those children were as young as four. Finally, after the whole of eighty-nine days, there is a nationwide sigh of relief.

As the children remained in captivity, Nigerians could relate. Even Nigerians yet to become parents themselves could relate to the indescribable anguish of parents   who had to go through interminable days and endless nights without knowing the whereabouts of their children.  For many families life lost its meaning in these eighty-nine days. It became difficult to eat or even sleep.

Yet for eighty-nine days, it appeared that the government of Niger State and the Federal Government were content to do only little. Or perhaps, they were petrified of the ruthless bandits closing upon the rest of Niger State and the Federal Capital Territory from impenetrable forests.

The banditry in Niger State has been unsparing. A member of the State’s Executive Council was abducted and subsequently released to tell harrowing tales of the blood curdling tactics of the bandits. The   Niger State Government   subsequently struggled to   dispel accusations that it paid ransom to get the commissioner released  while   the children abducted from Tegina were left  to languish in the lair of their tormentors.

As the days passed, the criminals who were holding the children perfected the art of coining outrageous and outlandish demands. Millions were paid yet they had the cheek to ask for millions more and even  means of transportation to facilitate their criminal enterprise. To salt the wounds, they  crafted a bucket list of demands complete with the chilling warning that unless their demands were met, the children would face an unimaginable fate.

Belongings were sold to raise money even as parents lamented that there existed   omniscient and omnipotent informants who fed the criminals critical information.

It is humiliating for Nigerians that right in the forests of Niger State, such an elaborate criminal enterprise was allowed to go on with the government appearing lost and helpless. It is no coincidence that something similar is afoot in Kaduna State with the captive students of Bethel Baptist High School. The   unfortunate incident in Tegina was not isolated. For years now, there has been a method to the madness of these bandits. They kidnap kids for ransom and in return for their sweat they rake in millions of naira. Their schemes run so smoothly and seamlessly for months that no one in their right senses can discount complicity in high places.

The questions are endless: Where do these bandits keep their victims and who are those that facilitate their indescribably malignant missions? Surely, the bandits and those who facilitate their heinous crimes against innocent children have no place here.

Nigeria‘s pathetic security situation which gravely imperils the education of children also ironically emphasizes the power of education to transform the country and carry out the most important form of disarmament – that of the mind.

THE NATION