Ten years since the kidnapping of the 276 students in Nigeria – The Post

The schoolgirls released in 2017, together with then President Muhammadu Buhari (Bayo Omoboriowo/Nigeria State House via AP)

It was carried out by the terrorist group Boko Haram in a school in Chibok: some of the girls were freed in the following years, but traces of many of them have been lost

On the night between 14 and 15 April 2014, ten years ago, some militiamen from the Islamist and terrorist group Boko Haram broke into a secondary school in Chibok, a predominantly Christian city in the north-east of Nigeria, and kidnapped 276 students, including 16 and 18 years old. Some of them managed to escape by jumping off the vans into which they had been loaded, others were freed in the following years in various Nigerian army operations, in exchange for large ransoms. About a hundred of them have been lost.

The kidnapping of the Chibok schoolgirls had enormous resonance outside Nigeria too. It was told in documentaries, books and was the subject of many demonstrations. A movement was also born, called “Bringbackourgirls” (“Give us back our girls”), which still today calls for the missing students to be found and freed.

A demonstration for the release of the students kidnapped in Chibok, in 2017 (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba, File)

The Chibok kidnapping has become somewhat of a symbol of a problem that still exists in Nigeria today: mass kidnappings continue to be frequent, carried out in ways similar to those of Chibok, both by terrorist groups and common criminal groups, and various governments have never been able to handle them.

On April 14, 2014, the militiamen reached the school in vans. In Chibok, where around 66 thousand people live, there had already been attacks by Boko Haram, and in the hours preceding the kidnapping in the city, rumors had already circulated about the arrival of the group, due to some phone calls from residents of nearby towns who had seen a convoy of vans heading towards Chibok.

Once they reached the school, the militiamen broke into it. Despite previous attacks, the city did not have adequate security. About fifteen soldiers present there clashed with the militiamen and tried to stop them: the clashes lasted about an hour, but no reinforcements arrived. The Boko Haram militiamen were more and more armed: they killed some soldiers and began to kidnap the students, threatening them with death if they did not follow them, and loading them into vans. Then they set fire to the school.

Once the kidnapping was over, the convoy of vans headed towards the Sambisa forest, a huge area that extends over 500 square kilometers and which has long been considered a hideout and training site for Boko Haram militants. The operation lasted a total of five hours. The students who managed to throw themselves off the vans and escape were around fifty. In the following days, some family members of the others joined and entered the forest, on motorbikes and with homemade weapons, without success.

The kidnapping aroused very intense reactions from Nigerian public opinion and beyond: the fact that a group of terrorists could act almost undisturbed, kidnapping almost 300 people within a city, burning down a school and escaping, became the example of the serious inadequacy of the institutions, and of how criminal and terrorist groups could exploit it to strengthen themselves. Furthermore, in the following months, human rights organizations such as Amnesty International accused the Nigerian army of having been aware of the danger of that kidnapping and of having done nothing to avoid it.

The local authorities promised to use all the human and material resources necessary to find and free the students, but it took three years to obtain the first releases. In a prisoner exchange organized by the Nigerian government, 82 female students were freed in May 2017. In addition to the exchange of prisoners, the Nigerian government paid a ransom of the equivalent of 3 million euros: the amount was revealed in a long investigation by Wall Street Journalin fact the first detailed account of how the majority of the kidnapped students were freed.

With the release of the students, the first stories about imprisonment also arrived: some girls told of forced conversions to Islam, of forced marriages with Boko Haram militiamen and of the fact that those who refused were forced into violence and forced labor. Some students died in childbirth, others during attacks carried out by the Nigerian army against Boko Haram.

In the following years, some other students, who had now become adults, were freed, but many others were never heard from again. Public interest waned, and conspiracy theories also spread according to which the Chibok kidnapping never actually happened and was invented for political purposes.

Kidnappings continued in the following years, both by terrorist groups and common criminals. Those carried out in schools were the most frequent: schools and colleges are very often found in isolated places and outside city centres, in places where security is even more precarious or absent than in the city. Kidnapping large groups of students, children or adolescents also makes it easier to obtain a ransom, due to the pressure from the national and international media and Nigerian public opinion for their release.

According to the organization Save the Children, from 2014 to today around 1,600 students have been kidnapped in the north of the country alone, an area where radical Islamist groups such as Boko Haram tend to be more active. Last month alone, over 300 students were kidnapped in three separate operations.

The governments that have followed one another so far in Nigeria have not only been unable to manage these problems, but have sometimes in turn taken advantage of them to enrich themselves. In the past, flows of money for ransoms have also been a profit opportunity for mid-level public officials, who in cases where the government managed negotiations with the kidnappers began to withhold part of the sum intended to free the hostages.

Over the years, various projects have been launched, such as the Safe Schools Initiative, promoted by the United Nations to strengthen security around schools, and whose implementation has been hindered by various problems, including the corruption of local politicians and instability itself politics of the country. However, mass kidnappings have declined since 2022, when the government passed a law making it illegal to pay ransoms and made kidnappings punishable by death if those kidnapped die.

– Read also: Mass kidnappings continue to be a problem in Nigeria

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