Berliner Boersenzeitung - Pastor, bride among 26 kidnapped as Nigeria reels from raids

EUR -
AED 4.294921
AFN 73.67711
ALL 96.319622
AMD 441.762663
ANG 2.093057
AOA 1072.414335
ARS 1630.270744
AUD 1.645511
AWG 2.10799
AZN 1.980997
BAM 1.955626
BBD 2.363091
BDT 143.36727
BGN 1.926891
BHD 0.441378
BIF 3482.146146
BMD 1.169481
BND 1.491848
BOB 8.124244
BRL 6.048568
BSD 1.173256
BTN 107.322929
BWP 15.533351
BYN 3.399643
BYR 22921.830698
BZD 2.359691
CAD 1.598055
CDF 2602.095438
CHF 0.912037
CLF 0.026157
CLP 1032.827306
CNY 8.048957
CNH 8.047603
COP 4407.294997
CRC 552.1793
CUC 1.169481
CUP 30.991251
CVE 110.255681
CZK 24.2589
DJF 208.930381
DKK 7.470529
DOP 70.457359
DZD 152.533325
EGP 57.563615
ERN 17.542217
ETB 183.659315
FJD 2.571456
FKP 0.867347
GBP 0.87231
GEL 3.158106
GGP 0.867347
GHS 12.582829
GIP 0.867347
GMD 85.372332
GNF 10290.526233
GTQ 8.999239
GYD 245.457156
HKD 9.145284
HNL 31.048836
HRK 7.532977
HTG 153.655043
HUF 379.751581
IDR 19719.791287
ILS 3.614375
IMP 0.867347
INR 107.181486
IQD 1537.029236
IRR 1537335.608716
ISK 143.682485
JEP 0.867347
JMD 183.813109
JOD 0.829146
JPY 183.890396
KES 151.471129
KGS 102.265512
KHR 4706.521726
KMF 487.673703
KPW 1052.53305
KRW 1712.283968
KWD 0.35916
KYD 0.977755
KZT 584.49309
LAK 25115.843687
LBP 105068.213537
LKR 362.813296
LRD 215.291804
LSL 18.843452
LTL 3.453174
LVL 0.707408
LYD 7.443657
MAD 10.808094
MDL 20.133987
MGA 4899.837262
MKD 61.652969
MMK 2455.784922
MNT 4173.102654
MOP 9.453965
MRU 46.780246
MUR 54.696327
MVR 18.079828
MWK 2034.632424
MXN 20.236866
MYR 4.589042
MZN 74.735693
NAD 18.843532
NGN 1602.513656
NIO 43.175982
NOK 11.174258
NPR 171.724562
NZD 1.966658
OMR 0.449677
PAB 1.173291
PEN 3.94405
PGK 5.048811
PHP 68.135727
PKR 327.8479
PLN 4.237611
PYG 7573.651315
QAR 4.290837
RON 5.09648
RSD 117.364469
RUB 90.610216
RWF 1714.843045
SAR 4.389049
SBD 9.416265
SCR 16.059192
SDG 703.443972
SEK 10.709805
SGD 1.488036
SHP 0.877414
SLE 28.739984
SLL 24523.434384
SOS 670.574861
SRD 44.148048
STD 24205.898798
STN 24.499082
SVC 10.266527
SYP 129.256881
SZL 18.832061
THB 36.756979
TJS 11.169451
TMT 4.104879
TND 3.415811
TOP 2.81583
TRY 51.422673
TTD 7.950634
TWD 36.939228
TZS 2982.176655
UAH 50.769214
UGX 4258.603658
USD 1.169481
UYU 45.116573
UZS 14301.974669
VES 490.553254
VND 30638.652119
VUV 139.149396
WST 3.176202
XAF 655.935214
XAG 0.012996
XAU 0.000218
XCD 3.160581
XCG 2.114603
XDR 0.815773
XOF 655.926802
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.979575
ZAR 18.79631
ZMK 10526.732669
ZMW 22.409968
ZWL 376.572456
  • CMSD

    0.1200

    23.4

    +0.51%

  • JRI

    0.0335

    13.19

    +0.25%

  • NGG

    0.1100

    93.88

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    -0.8400

    58.29

    -1.44%

  • CMSC

    0.0950

    23.545

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    -0.5300

    62.12

    -0.85%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.2700

    99.61

    +0.27%

  • BCC

    -2.1500

    80.59

    -2.67%

  • BCE

    -0.0800

    26.23

    -0.3%

  • AZN

    -4.7200

    203.73

    -2.32%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    18.2

    -1.1%

  • RELX

    -0.1100

    34.68

    -0.32%

  • VOD

    -0.1800

    15.18

    -1.19%

  • BP

    0.6100

    39.47

    +1.55%

Pastor, bride among 26 kidnapped as Nigeria reels from raids
Pastor, bride among 26 kidnapped as Nigeria reels from raids / Photo: Simon MALFATTO, Kun TIAN, Laurence SAUBADU - AFP

Pastor, bride among 26 kidnapped as Nigeria reels from raids

Armed men have kidnapped 26 people including a pastor and a bride in two separate raids in Nigeria, the latest in a string of mass abductions to rock the west African country.

Text size:

A gang of criminals abducted the clergyman along with 11 worshippers on Sunday after storming an out-of-the-way rural church in Ejiba, in central Nigeria's Kogi State, the state's information commissioner told AFP.

And in Sokoto State in the northeast a bride and 10 of her bridesmaids were among the 14 abducted in the night of Saturday to Sunday from the village of Chacho, a resident said.

In recent weeks, gangs have kidnapped hundreds of people for ransom across Nigeria, which has struggled to respond to the threat posed both by jihadist groups and criminals known locally as "bandits".

The unrest has heaped pressure on the Nigerian government, with US President Donald Trump threatening military intervention in Africa's most populous country over what he calls the killing of Christians by radical Islamists.

In response to the spate of kidnappings, President Bola Tinubu declared a nationwide emergency on Wednesday.

Kingsley Femi Fanwo, Kogi State's information commissioner, blamed Sunday's church raid on bandits, and urged isolated places of worship to "reconsider worshipping in crime prone areas for now until the situation gets better".

"The police helicopter has arrived for land and air battle to free the abducted worshippers," Fanwo told AFP.

"I just got confirmation that 12 people are missing, though they are still looking for some missing persons," he added.

In the separate raid in Chacho, a baby, the baby's mother and another woman were also taken among the 14 people kidnapped, local resident Aliyu Abdullahi told AFP.

- 'Kidnap for ransom' -

Abductions became more widespread in Nigeria after the jihadist group Boko Haram kidnapped 276 teenage girls in Chibok, in the northeast, sparking an international outcry.

Besides radical Islamists, bandit gangs have also sown violence across swathes of northwest and central Nigeria, where they carry out kidnappings for ransom, attack villages, kill their inhabitants and burn houses after looting them.

According to Abdullahi, Chacho had already been targeted in October by bandits, who kidnapped 13 people.

"We had to pay ransom to secure the freedom. Now, we are faced with the same situation," he told AFP over the phone.

A Nigerian intelligence report seen by AFP confirmed the Chacho attack.

The report suggested that deals struck by neighbouring states in the hopes of getting the bandits to agree to stop their activities may be partly responsible for an uptick in abductions in November.

Security experts argue that such agreement allow gangs to entrench themselves in their hideouts while continuing their raids elsewhere.

"As a result, some bandits may be moving into areas with less military pressure. This shift can lead to more mass kidnappings in places like Sokoto, leading to an increase in mass kidnap-for-ransom attacks," the report added.

Following the rise in kidnappings and attacks, Trump threatened Nigeria at the start of November with military action, claiming that Nigerian Christians were being persecuted.

Nigeria has rejected that claim, insisting that the country's various security crises have left more Muslims dead.

The religiously diverse country of 230 million people is the scene of long-brewing conflicts that have killed both Christians and Muslims, often indiscriminately.

(T.Renner--BBZ)