HomeAfricaFactbox-Mass school kidnappings in Nigeria in recent years

Factbox-Mass school kidnappings in Nigeria in recent years

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LAGOS, July 1 (Reuters) - At least ‌36 children and a staff member are missing after being kidnapped ​by gunmen from a school in Nigeria's northeast, the third such mass school abduction since May in Africa's most populous country.

Here ⁠are some of the worst of recent years:

June 29, 2026 - Gunmen burst into a secondary school in Borno state and abducted students sitting exams. Authorities said eight had been rescued.

May 2026 - Armed ​men kidnapped at least 39 schoolchildren and seven teachers in the southwestern Oyo state, killing one teacher in captivity ‌and wounding security personnel during a rescue attempt. The children and teachers remain in captivity.

May 2026 - Suspected militants abducted 42 students from a primary and junior secondary school in Borno. They remain missing.

November ⁠2025 - Gunmen took 303 pupils and 12 staff members from a Catholic school ⁠in Niger state. The children and staff regained their freedom after a month.

November 2025 - Gunmen attacked a government girls' boarding school in Kebbi state, killing the vice principal and taking 25 students. The girls were later released.

March 2024 - Gunmen seized more than 200 students and staff in Kaduna state. ‌The students were rescued after two weeks. The government denied paying a ransom.

July 2021 - About 150 ⁠students were kidnapped when armed men raided a Baptist school in ‌Kaduna state. The students were released in batches after ransom ​payments.

May 2021 - Gunmen abducted 136 students from an Islamic school in Niger state. Six of the pupils died in captivity, 15 escaped and the rest were released after three months.

February 2021 - At ‌least 279 girls were kidnapped by gunmen from a government school ​in Zamfara state and force-marched into a ⁠forest. They were released after a few days, during which they were beaten ‌and threatened with being shot.

December 2020 - Armed men ⁠abducted 344 boys from a boarding school in the northern Katsina state. The Islamist insurgent group Boko Haram claimed responsibility before the students were freed by Nigerian security forces a week later.

Back in ​April 2014, Boko Haram's abduction of ‌276 girls from a government school in Borno's Chibok brought such kidnappings to international attention and ⁠prompted the launch of the "Bring Back Our Girls" ​campaign. At least 89 girls remain unaccounted for, according to the non-profit Murtala Muhammed Foundation.

(Reporting ​by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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