đź”— Share this article Two dozen Nigerian-born Schoolgirls Liberated More Than Seven Days Post Abduction Approximately two dozen Nigerian-born girls taken hostage from a learning facility more than seven days back have been released, national leadership announced. Attackers raided an educational institution situated within local province on 17 November, fatally wounding a worker while capturing two dozen plus one scholars. The nation's leader Bola Tinubu commended law enforcement concerning the "immediate reaction" to the incident - while precise conditions regarding their liberation had not been clarified. The continent's largest country has witnessed a spate of captures over the past few years - amounting to two hundred fifty youths captured at faith-based academy days ago yet to be located. Through an announcement, a designated representative of the administration asserted that every student taken from learning institution located in the area had been accounted for, noting that this event caused similar abductions across further local territories. The president stated that more personnel are being positioned towards high-risk zones to stop more cases related to captures". Via additional communication through social media, Tinubu stated: "Aerial forces is to maintain continuous surveillance over the most remote areas, synchronising operations with ground units to effectively identify, separate, interfere with, and eliminate all hostile elements." More than 1,500 children were taken hostage from educational institutions over the past decade, during which multiple young women were abducted during the infamous Chibok mass abduction. Recently, at least numerous pupils and workers were taken from an educational institution, a Catholic boarding school, in Nigeria's Niger state. Fifty of those taken from learning institution managed to get away based on information from the Christian Association - but at least two hundred fifty are still missing. The leading religious leader across the territory has mentioned that Nigeria's government is undertaking "no meaningful effort" to rescue those still missing. The capture incident at the school marked the third instance to hit Nigeria over recent days, pressuring national leadership to call off travel plans international conference organized within the African country recently to manage the emergency. UN education envoy the diplomat called on the international community to "do our utmost" to support efforts to recover kidnapped youths. Brown, ex-British leader, said: "We also have responsibility to make certain Nigerian schools remain secure environments for education, rather than places where children can be plucked from their classroom for criminal profit."