North-West Kaduna State • 18 January 2026: Gunmen abduct about 163
Christians after storming two churches in
Kaduna State, Nigeria.
North Zamfara State Zamfara, one of the security dark spots in Nigeria is caught between herder-farmers clashes and kidnapping and banditry. In June 2019 a household was attacked by bandits seizing the man alongside his three wives and a 13-year-old son. In August the Director of Budget for the state was kidnapped while his deputy he had been travelling with was killed in the attack. In 2019 the governor of Zamfara,
Bello Matawalle, initiated a peace and reconciliation plan to bring the bandits who attack and kidnap villagers back home offering them jobs in place of kidnapping and banditry. In August 2019 over 300 kidnapped victims who were held captive waiting for the payment of ransom on their heads by family members were freed. Days later another batch of 40 kidnap victims were freed.
Makurdi kidnapping On 24 April 2021, gunmen kidnapped students from the
Federal University of Agriculture in
Makurdi, in
Benue State. According to eyewitnesses, three students were kidnapped, but two students were confirmed kidnapped later. This is Nigeria's fifth kidnapping from an academic institution in 2021. It came just four days after the
Greenfield University kidnapping. On 28 April 2021, the university released a statement confirming the return of the abducted students. According to the university's spokesperson, the two students came back on 27 April 2021 unhurt.
South-East Head of the Methodist church kidnapping The head of the
Methodist church in Nigeria, Samuel Kanu, was kidnapped on Sunday 26 May 2022. The kidnapping occurred along a highway in the southeastern state of
Abia. He and a number of priests travelling to the
Owerri airport after a church event were abducted after their vehicle's tyres were punctured by the assailants' bullets. Under threats of death by decapitation, the priests were coerced into paying an eventual ransom of a hundred million
naira. This was done via phone calls to heads and members of the church. The funds were intended for distribution among the members of the kidnapping group present, but most were to be sent to other senior members of the larger kidnapping network, as well as to their sponsors. == References ==