Wednesday, December 10, 2025 - The Catholic Bishop of Kontagora Diocese, Bulus Yohanna, has suggested that the abduction of schoolchildren in Niger State was primarily motivated by ransom rather than religious reasons.
Speaking during an interview Channels Television’s Sunrise
Daily on Tuesday, December 9, 2025, Bishop Yohanna, who is also the proprietor
of St. Mary’s Catholic Primary and Secondary Schools in Papiri, Agwara Local
Government Area, said testimonies from pupils who escaped point to a clear
financial motive behind the attack.
“Listening to some of those who escaped, I mean the pupils,
when the raid was taking place, what they heard them saying was, ‘let us take
more so that we have more money," he said.
"Now, if I go by that, I think this abduction has to do
more with ransom rather than maybe any religious undertone… sometimes it is
said that it is very hard to know when a blind man is sleeping.
"So if somebody is carrying a particular act,
until you hear from him what exactly his intention is, you cannot conclude that
this is why he is doing it.
“But if what the pupils were saying, those that escaped,
they heard them say, let us take more so that we have more money. So maybe the
first intention there is for ransom.”
Terrorists on November 21, stormed St. Mary’s School and
abducted 315 persons, including 12 teachers. About 50 pupils managed to escape
shortly after the attack.
The bishop expressed mixed emotions over the release of the
100 schoolchildren as 165 others remain in captivity.
"We are experiencing a mix of emotions. On one hand, we
are happy about the release of the 100 students, and on the other hand, we are
sad because 165 students are still in captivity,” Bishop Yohanna said.
Speaking on the Niger State Governor, Mohammed Bago’s
closure of all schools in the state following the attack, Yohanna said some
parents have appealed against the closures.
"One of the parents, when the NSA visited us, was
begging that the school should not be closed, that even with this thing that
has happened, the school should continue.
"We will encourage them [students] that they have to go
back to school. We will do everything to make sure that the school continues.”
Bishop Yohanna called for sustained government action to
secure the release of the remaining children and strengthen security in schools
across Niger State.

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