Monday, August 25, 2025 - At least 76 kidnap victims, including women and children, were rescued on Saturday by Nigeria's military in northwestern Katsina state, local security authorities said, adding that one child captive died in the operation. The rescue followed a precision air strike targeting a "notorious bandit kingpin" and his gang in Katsina, authorities added.
Nigeria's military rescued 76 people kidnapped by criminal
gangs known as "bandits" in northwestern Katsina state, though one
child captive died in the operation, local security authorities said.
The rescue took place on Saturday, with air force personnel
raiding a site at Pauwa Hill, in the Kankara local government area, Katsina
state internal security commissioner Nasir Mu'azu said in a statement.
The operation was staged following an air force strike in
the hunt for a "notorious bandit kingpin" and his gang suspected to
be behind an attack Tuesday on a mosque and
on nearby villages that claimed 50 lives, said the statement.
Mu'azu said that the operation "successfully"
rescued 76 kidnapped people, including women and children.
"However, it was regrettably noted that one child
tragically lost his life during the ordeal," he said.
There was no information on the number of casualties among
"bandits", as members of criminal gangs are locally known.
In some past cases, families of victims have disputed
official claims of rescue and reported having to pay ransoms for the release of
captives.
Mass kidnappings for ransom are common in
Nigeria's northwest and central states, where heavily armed gangs often target
remote villages to loot and abduct residents.
The gangs have turned cattle theft, kidnapping and
imposing taxes on farmers into huge moneymakers across the impoverished
countryside, where the government's presence has long been nearly non-existent.
Nigeria's banditry crisis originated in conflicts over land and water rights
between herders and farmers, which has since morphed into organised crime.
The militias have no ideological leaning and are motivated
by financial gain, but officials and analysts have expressed concern over
growing pragmatic alliances with jihadists from Nigeria's northeast.

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