Imperial Leader Joe Biden and Palace leadership were too busy dropping bombs on Syria, meant to kick off a war against Iran’s Ayatollah, to notice that elsewhere in the region someone made off with hundreds of young schoolgirls in another mass abduction.
Schoolgirls abducted at gunpoint
In a demonstration of what happens when a government is unable or unwilling to enforce the law, a group of heavily armed bandits abducted more than three hundred West African schoolgirls in northern Nigeria on Friday.
It’s only the latest mass kidnapping of students. The police and military were powerless to stop the attack but now they’re out beating the bushes in an attempt to rescue the girls.
Police spokesman Mohammed Shehu confirmed 317 students from the Girls Science Secondary School in Jangebe town were carried off by the guerillas leaving nothing behind but an empty dormitory. The boarding school is supposed to be protected but the defenses weren’t nearly good enough.
Two of the kidnapped schoolgirls are the daughters of Nasiru Abdullahi, aged 10 and 13. He’s not happy with security. “It is disappointing that even though the military have a strong presence near the school they were unable to protect the girls,” he told Associated Press it’s in God’s hands. “At this stage, we are only hoping on divine intervention.”
One of the local residents, Musa Mustapha, explained that the raiders hit the military camp and checkpoint first.
That pinned down the soldiers and prevented them from “interfering while the gunmen” spent “several hours at the school” interfering with the schoolgirls. The police aren’t saying a whole lot but for now, there don’t seem to be any “casualties.”
Kidnapping for fun and profit
The political situation in Nigeria seems to be run by an Antifa-like system bordering on anarchy but over there in Africa, Black lives don’t matter. It’s everyone for themselves. Several large and well armed groups follow the local Lords of War as a normal state of affairs.
They make their living kidnapping people for money, especially schoolgirls. They can also trade them for captured members of their own bands. That means kidnappings like this happen all the time. The latest was just two weeks ago.
UNICEF is furious. They want the schoolgirls released at once! UNICEF spokesunit Peter Hawkins was hopping up and down when he declared, “we are angered and saddened by yet another brutal attack on schoolchildren in Nigeria.”
“This is a gross violation of children’s rights and a horrific experience for children to go through.” He demands “their immediate release.” Sure, the kidnappers scoff. Soon as we get a good price. If nobody comes up with the ransom, there’s always a market for young girls.
Amnesty International isn’t real happy either. They called the latest kidnapping of schoolgirls by the hundreds an “appalling attack” before pointing out the obvious. “The girls abducted are in serious risk of being harmed.” Really? Things are so bad that the teachers are fleeing the country.
Nigeria sees these sorts of episodes on a regular basis. Nobody will forget the Boko Haram mass abduction in April 2014 of 276 girls from the secondary school in Chibok. More than a hundred of those girls remain missing.