A mass Nigeria School Abduction occurred on 21 November 2025, when armed individuals seized 303 schoolchildren and 12 teachers from St. Mary’s Catholic School in Papiri town, north-central Nigeria’s Niger State. The abduction, which represents the second mass school attack in the region within a week, has escalated concerns regarding institutional security failures in Africa’s most populous nation. Following the incident, the Niger State government issued a statement asserting that the school had ignored prior security intelligence. The state’s secretary to the government claimed the school reopened “without notifying or seeking clearance from the state government, thereby exposing pupils and the staff to avoidable risk”.
The Attack and Government Security Claim
The St. Mary’s Catholic School, which is classified as a secondary school and is linked to an adjacent primary school, was raided in the early hours of Friday morning. The confirmed total of 303 schoolchildren and 12 teachers was announced on Saturday by the Christian Association of Nigeria (hereinafter: CAN), Niger State chapter. This updated figure followed a formal verification exercise and census. Residents reported scenes of panic as families searched for children who had fled, while remaining captives were taken further into the bush.
This mass kidnapping occurred days after an earlier incident in neighbouring Kebbi State’s Maga town, where 25 schoolgirls were abducted from a secondary school. No group has yet claimed responsibility for either abduction, although armed criminal groups often operate in the region.
The State’s Warning Assertion
The central political dimension of the event emerged with the statement from the Niger State government. The state authorities confirmed they had received intelligence warning of increased security threats in the area. The government subsequently placed the failure to prevent the attack on the school administration. Local media reported that residents indicated only community security arrangements were in place at the school during the attack, with no official police or government forces securing the premises. The Catholic Diocese of Kontagora also confirmed that one security staff member was “badly shot” during the raid.
In response to the series of abductions, authorities deployed tactical security squads alongside local hunters to pursue the children. Furthermore, the Niger State government and authorities in nearby Katsina and Plateau states ordered the closure of many schools as a precautionary measure.
At the federal level, President Bola Tinubu cancelled his planned trip to the G20 summit in South Africa to address the escalating security crisis. The abductions have occurred weeks after the United States of America President publicly threatened military action, citing what he described as targeted killings of Nigeria’s Christians — an assertion rejected by the Nigerian government.
Institutional Failure and Regional Kidnapping Trends
Reports indicate that Nigeria has seen recurrent, large-scale abductions since the kidnapping of nearly 300 girls by Boko Haram extremists in Chibok more than a decade ago. Amnesty International has previously noted that the Nigerian authorities have not conducted a credible investigation into the security failures that enabled the Chibok atrocity, thereby failing to protect children from subsequent attacks. This systemic lack of accountability contributes to the proliferation of armed gangs.
Concluding Outlook
The current events underscore a significant failure to establish effective security safeguards for civilian institutions, particularly educational ones. The surge in large-scale kidnappings for ransom has been widely reported as a tactic favoured by both armed bandit gangs and religious groups, with financial gain serving as a primary motivator. This specific failure is compounded by the wider regional trend where child abduction has become a highly profitable and widespread operation, often linked to socio-economic factors such as poverty, inequality and weak institutional responses.
Data from the United Nations verified a surge in grave violations against children in 2023, with high numbers of abductions, child use in armed groups and killings occurring in nations including Nigeria, Somalia, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This development suggests that until political institutions achieve a fundamental restructuring of security operations — focusing on accountability and resource addressing the root causes — the use of child abduction as a coercive political or financial tactic will continue to displace populations.