Jihadists free 10 hostages in Nigeria: sources

Author: AFP

Nigerian jihadists have freed 10 hostages including seven local aid workers, two of them employed by the United Nations, after weeks of mediation, a UN source and a mediation official told AFP Wednesday.

The hostages, abducted between last December and April in the northeast by the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) were released on Monday after government-backed mediation by a local NGO, the sources said. ISWAP and rival Boko Haram jihadists periodically free hostages taken during Nigeria’s more than decade-long Islamist insurgency in the northeast that has killed around 40,000 people since 2009. “We succeeded in securing the release of 10 hostages in the custody of ISWAP, including seven humanitarian workers,” said Ummu-Kalthum Muhammad, head of Kalthum Foundation for Peace, which facilitated the release.

“It was a result of weeks-long negotiations with the captors,” said the head of the Maiduguri-based local charity, which had previously mediated the release of hostages held by ISWAP and Boko Haram jihadists. Muhammad said the hostages included a World Food Programme (WFP) staffer seized in December last year along with a local staffer for the International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) and a worker for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) kidnapped in January. The three were abducted at bogus checkpoints outside the Borno state regional capital Maiduguri.

Muhammad said four humanitarian staff kidnapped in April in the town of Dikwa during an ISWAP raid on a UN hub, as well as a Christian priest, a university teacher and a government worker, were among the other freed hostages. A source at the UN office in Maiduguri confirmed the release of “some humanitarian workers including UN staff” held by the jihadists. The two sources did not say if any ransom was paid. Since it split from mainstream Boko Haram group in 2016, ISWAP has intensified attacks on military targets but has also increasingly been targeting civilians. The group set up fake  checkpoints on highways, abducting civilians and aid workers.

The UN has repeatedly expressed concern over abductions and attacks targetting aid workers in the northeast where 12 humanitarian workers were killed in 2019 alone, twice the fatalities the previous year, according to UN figures. At least two million have been displaced from their homes by the conflict and aid workers say access to the needy is becoming more complicated because of worsening security and as relief workers are directly targetted. The violence has spread to neighbouring Niger, Cameroon and Chad, leading to the formation of a regional military force to fight the insurgents.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • World

Iran tells UN nuclear chief it won’t negotiate under ‘intimidation’

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on Thursday that Iran will not negotiate under "intimidation" as…

2 hours ago
  • World

Sri Lanka president eyes parliament win in snap election

Sri Lanka votes Thursday in a second national election in as many months with a…

2 hours ago
  • World

Trump opts for personal ties and TV chops in choosing his team

In staffing his incoming administration, President-elect Donald Trump has so far veered from the conventional…

2 hours ago
  • World

Thousands flee as Typhoon Usagi hits north of Philippines

Typhoon Usagi slammed into the Philippines' already disaster-ravaged north on Thursday, as authorities rushed to…

2 hours ago
  • Sports

Australia defeat Pakistan by 29 runs in rain-hit first T20I

Glenn Maxwell's blistering knock, combined with a solid bowling performance, guided Australia to a convincing…

2 hours ago
  • Sports

Int’l Squash Championship from Nov 18

The Pakistan Squash Federation (PSF) in collaboration with Serena Hotels, is organizing Chief of the…

2 hours ago