Tuesday, December 2, 2025 - A woman escaped lynching after she stole a 3-year-old girl in Gwagwa community under Jiwa Chiefdom in the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).
According to Daily Trust, Gwagwa and Jiwa communities are
witnessing a disturbing rise in child thefts incidents. Within the last two
weeks, about five children have reportedly been taken from the area.
The latest incident occurred on Friday, November 28, 2025
when the suspect abducted a three-year-old girl, Bilkisu Abdulkarim, in front
of her parents’ home in Gwagwa town.
The woman was caught with the child and was already seated on
a commercial motorcycle, allegedly preparing to escape with her victim.
A family member, Ruqayya Ibrahim, narrated the incident to
the publication said the suspect approached the girl and her two older siblings
around 4pm while they were playing outside their compound.
“The two siblings ran into the compound, where I was sitting
with their mother. They said a woman had approached them and offered to buy
them biscuits. Their mother asked if they accepted anything, and they said,
‘No.’ When we asked about the girl, they said she was still outside,” Ruqayya
said.
“Their mother told them to bring her in, but they returned to
say they saw the woman carrying the girl away. We rushed outside to the main
road, where we found the woman already seated on a commercial motorcycle with
the child.
“The mother shouted ‘thief, thief!’ People gathered
immediately, and some youths beat her up, even as she claimed she was taking
the girl to the police station.
The victim’s father, Abdulkarim Yahaya, said he was in the
mosque for the late-afternoon prayer when he received a call informing him that
his daughter had been abducted but rescued
“I ran to the main road, where I met the woman. She had been
rescued from a mob by a community leader, the Danmadami of Jiwa, who put her in
his car and handed her over to the police at the Gwagwa Division,” he
said.
The Danmadami, Alhaji Dauda Muhammad, who doubles as Sarkin
Hausawa of the community said he had received at least four other reports of
missing children from Gwagwa and Jiwa in recent weeks.
He explained that his intervention prevented the suspect from
being lynched before she was handed over to the police.
According to him, the suspect claimed during questioning that
she lived in Madalla, in the Suleja area of Niger State.
"She said she was looking for a room to rent in the area
and saw the girl, who she claimed had fallen into a drainage ditch. I asked her
why she didn’t look for the parents or anyone nearby instead of taking the girl
on her back and boarding a motorcycle. She said she wanted to take her to the
police station,” he said.
The suspect was taken to a clinic by the police for treatment
of an injury she sustained on her forehead before being moved back into
custody.
A resident, Gazali Salisu, whose five-year-old daughter,
Safiyya, has been missing since November 16, said she is suspected to be
another victim of the syndicate.
He said his three older children had left for the sunset
prayer, and Safiyya, who was at home with her mother, may have stepped out to
follow them.
“When they returned, they said she was not with them. Since
then, all efforts to trace her have failed,” he said.
Human rights activist Comrade Nura Muktar, who first drew
attention to the situation, said awareness campaigns are now ongoing in mosques
and churches to sensitise parents to monitor their children’s movements more
closely, especially during the ember months.

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