What’s behind Nigeria’s latest school kidnappings, church attack?

Relatives and students leave the Federal Government Girls College in Bwari, on the outskirts of Abuja, on November 22, 2025. The national education ministry ordered 47 boarding secondary schools across the country be shut following after gunmen kidnapped more than 300 students and teachers from a Catholic school. (AFP)
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Updated 24 November 2025
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What’s behind Nigeria’s latest school kidnappings, church attack?

  • Northern Nigeria plagued by 15 years of insurgencies
  • Kidnapping attacks motivated by money, schools easy targets
  • Nigeria’s military stretched, some seek talks with insurgents

LAGOS: Nigeria is under renewed global scrutiny after gunmen abducted more than 300 students from a Catholic school in the northwest, the second major attack this week following a deadly assault on a church service.
The incidents have piled more pressure on the Nigerian government following US President Donald Trump’s threats of military action over the alleged persecution of Christians in the West African nation.
Here are key points about the attacks and Nigeria’s security situation.

Who is behind the latest attacks?
If confirmed, Friday’s attack on St. Mary’s School in Niger state — roughly the size of Serbia — would be Nigeria’s worst school abduction since the kidnapping of 276 Chibok girls by Boko Haram in the northeast in 2014.
No one has publicly claimed responsibility for the latest assaults, although the perpetrators of the church raid on Tuesday appear to belong to an armed gang motivated by ransom money.
The attacks are indiscriminate and follow a similar pattern. Gangs known locally as bandits arrive, shoot sporadically to scare people, abduct victims and vanish into nearby forests.
On Monday, armed men stormed a predominantly Muslim girls school in northwest Kebbi state and seized 25 students.
Also on Monday, another armed gang abducted 64 people, including women and children, from their homes in Zamfara state, which borders Kebbi.
On Tuesday, gunmen attacked the Christ Apostolic Church in central Kwara state, killing two people and abducting 38 worshippers, according to a church official.
The official said the gunmen had issued a ransom demand of 100 million naira (roughly $69,000) per worshipper.
Kebbi, Kwara and Niger states border one another.
This week’s attacks prompted Nigerian President Bola Tinubu to cancel trips to South Africa and Angola, where he was due to attend a G20 summit and an African Union-European Union summit.
Security experts say such attacks and kidnappings are motivated by money, and schools are easy targets as they lack adequate security. Also, parents are more prepared to raise ransoms to bring back their children.
“There’s just a lot of money to be made in this enterprise,” said Ikemesit Effiong, senior partner at Lagos-based SBM Intelligence consultancy.

Where are the attack hotsports in Nigeria?
Most of northern Nigeria, covering over 20 of the country’s 36 states, is blanketed by insecurity, disrupting daily lives, including travel and farming.
In the northwest, armed gangs without any known religious or political motives carry out ransom kidnappings and hide in forests. Nigeria has vast, remote ungoverned spaces where many more attacks go unreported.
To the northeast, ultra-hard-line Islamist militant groups Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) are waging an insurgency that has created Nigeria’s largest humanitarian crisis, displacing over two million people and killing tens of thousands over 15 years. ISWAP captured and executed an army general on November 14.
In food-producing central Nigeria, where the mostly Muslim north meets the largely Christian south, there are deadly clashes over religion, ethnicity and access to land and water.

Are the attacks aimed at Christians?
Nnamdi Obasi, senior adviser at International Crisis Group, said there had been numerous incidents of faith-based violence, including in the central belt and the northeast, but Muslims have suffered just as much as Christians.
Nigeria says claims that Christians face persecution misrepresent the complex security situation and do not take into account efforts to safeguard religious freedom.
Ethnic and religious tensions often flare in the country of 230 million people and around 200 ethnic groups.
“Of course, many Nigerians believe successive governments over the years could have done better in countering armed groups, ending atrocities and sanctioning perpetrators,” said Obasi.
“But there is no credible evidence that the government and its security forces, led by both Christians and Muslims, have been complicit in violence against any particular faith group.”
A senior US State Department official said on Thursday that the US was considering actions such as sanctions and Pentagon engagement on counter-terrorism as part of a plan to compel the Nigerian government to better protect Christian communities and religious freedom.

How is the Nigerian government responding?
Nigeria’s military, the largest in sub-Saharan Africa, is leading the fight against armed groups, while in the northwest, traditional leaders often seek peace through talks with bandit gangs.
The military is stretched and the bandits and insurgents are scattered over a vast area.
In August, Nigeria’s Air Force said its airstrikes killed nearly 600 insurgents. But on the ground, militants continue with attacks.
Data from US crisis-monitoring group ACLED shows there were over 1,923 attacks against civilians in Nigeria this year, killing more than 3,000 people.
At least six northern states have ordered the closure of schools fearing attacks. 


Palestinian protester, detained for nearly a year, says ‘inhumane’ jail conditions prompted seizure

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Palestinian protester, detained for nearly a year, says ‘inhumane’ jail conditions prompted seizure

A Palestinian woman who has been held in an immigration jail for nearly a year after she attended a protest in New York City said she suffered a seizure after fainting and hitting her head last week, an episode she linked to “filthy” and “inhumane” conditions inside the privately run detention facility.
Leqaa Kordia, 33, was hospitalized for three days following the seizure, which she said was the first of her life. She has since returned to the Prairieland Detention Facility in Texas, where she has been held since March.
In a statement released through her lawyers on Thursday, Kordia said she was shackled the entire time she was hospitalized and prevented from calling family or meeting with her lawyers.
“For three days in the emergency room, my hands and legs were weighed down by heavy chains as they drew my blood and gave me medications,” Kordia said. “I felt like an animal. My hands are still full of marks from the heavy metal.”
Her doctors, she said, told her the seizure may have been the result of poor sleep, inadequate nutrition and stress. Her lawyers previously warned that Kordia, a devout Muslim, had lost 49 pounds (22 kilograms) and fainted in the shower, in part because the jail had denied her meals that comply with religious requirements.
“I’ve been here for 11 months, and the food is so bad it makes me sick,” the statement continued. “At Prairieland, your daily life — whether you can have access to the food or medicine you need or even a good night’s sleep — is controlled by the private, for-profit business that runs this facility.”
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press, but said in a statement to The New York Times that Kordia wasn’t being mistreated and was receiving proper medical care.
A resident of New Jersey who grew up in the West Bank, Kordia was among around 100 people arrested outside Columbia University during protests at the school in 2024.
The charges against her were dismissed and sealed. But information about her arrest was later given to the Trump administration by the New York City police department, which said it was told the records were needed as part of a money laundering investigation.
Last year, Kordia was among the first pro-Palestinian protesters arrested in the Trump administration’s crackdown on noncitizens who had criticized Israel’s military actions in Gaza. She is the only one who remains jailed.
She has not been accused of a crime and has twice been ordered released on bond by an immigration judge. The government has challenged both rulings, an unusual step in cases that don’t involve serious crimes, which triggers a lengthy appeals process.
Kordia was taken into custody during a March 13 check-in with US Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. At the time, federal officials touted her arrest as part of the sweeping crackdown on pro-Palestinian campus activists, pointing to her 2024 arrest outside of Columbia as proof of “pro-Hamas” activities.
Kordia said she joined the demonstration after Israel killed scores of her relatives in Gaza, where she maintains deep personal ties. “My way of helping my family and my people was to go to the streets,” she told The Associated Press in October.
Federal officials have accused Kordia of overstaying her visa, while casting scrutiny on payments she sent to relatives in the Middle East. Kordia said the money was meant to help family members whose homes were destroyed in the war or were otherwise suffering.
An immigration judge later found “overwhelming evidence” that Kordia was telling the truth about the payments. Attorneys for Kordia say she was previously in the US on a student visa, but mistakenly surrendered that status after applying to remain in the country as the relative of a US citizen.
In her statement on Thursday, Kordia said the detention facility was “built to break people and destroy their health and hope.”
“The best medicine for me and everyone else here is our freedom,” she added.