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A group of GGSS Jangebe students inspect their hostels for the first time since their abduction in 2021. Picture: Qosim Suleiman

A group of GGSS Jangebe students inspect their hostels for the first time since their abduction in 2021. Picture: Qosim Suleiman

SPECIAL REPORT: Four Years After Mass Abduction: Jangebe students battle for education, hope

After their tragic abduction from their school dormitories in 2021, close to 300 girls of GGSS Jangebe have gone to their separate communities, each picking up the pieces of their lives

byQosim Suleiman
February 26, 2025
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Sadiya Lawal lifted her one-year-old son, his small body squirming as he cried. She gently ignored his protests and placed him in her sister’s arms, offering a brief, apologetic glance before turning away.
She moved with deliberate steps, her pace slow and steady, as if every movement carried the weight of the past. Settling on a mat on the floor, she flipped the niqab over her head as she prepared to share her story – one that had altered the course of her life.

“It was a few days after we resumed school,” she began, her gaze shifting away as memories of that night resurfaced – the night her life flashed before her.

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Sadiya Lawali settled on a mat on the floor and flipped the face cover on her burqa over her head as she prepared to share her story. Picture: Qosim Suleiman
Sadiya Lawali settled on a mat on the floor and flipped the face cover on her burqa over her head as she prepared to share her story. Picture: Qosim Suleiman

When they came

It was Thursday, 25 February 2021, and the lives of Mrs Lawal, now 21, and about 300 girls were about to change, although none of them could have predicted it. Their school, the Government Girls Secondary School (GGSS), Jangebe, Zamfara State, had just resumed another school term after a long COVID-19 lockdown-induced holiday.

Many students had yet to return, but the chatter of those in school filled the dormitories as the students defied light out to chat with friends.

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About an hour after midnight, a different noise emerged at the school gate, about a kilometre from the student hostels. A group of Ak-47-carrying and motorcycle-riding bandits had approached the gate. One of them attempted to scale the fence but jumped down when he saw the school’s local security personnel carrying a Dane gun.

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In the early hours of Friday, 26 February 2021, bandits stormed GGSS Jangebe and abducted close to 300 school girls. Picture: Qosim Suleiman
In the early hours of Friday, 26 February 2021, bandits stormed GGSS Jangebe and abducted close to 300 school girls. Picture: Qosim Suleiman

The security man knew he could not overpower the bandits and fled. The bandit scaled the fence successfully the second time and opened the side gate for his colleagues, giving them unrestrained access to the school premises.

Their first stop was the students’ hostels, where the students had lulled themselves to sleep. The bandits walked into the hostel lobby, flashed torches through the windows, and barked orders for the students to step out.

Amsau Yusuf said she thought one of their teachers was trying to wake them for the Subh (morning) prayers.
“Wake up now, or I’ll kill you,” Ms Yusuf recalled one of the bandits shouting. “We were trying to hide, and they pointed guns at us. We started crying, and they herded us like cattle.”

The bandits led some of the girls to identify the staff in the building, but they didn’t find anyone. The only staff member living on campus, Anas Yushau, hid in his bedroom, scared as the drama unfolded.
Shortly after, the bandits led the students – about 300 of them – along thorny paths for hours before they settled somewhere in the forest.

Abandoned hostels at GGSS Jangebe. Picture: Qosim Suleiman
Abandoned hostels at GGSS Jangebe. Picture: Qosim Suleiman

An unforgettable night

Jangebe, a little-known community, became famous as local and international media platforms broke the news the next morning of another mass abduction of students — the third in three months. Naturally, parents were distraught as the government scampered to save the students amid immense public pressure.

Three months earlier, in December 2020, bandits had abducted over 300 boys at the Government Boys Secondary School, Kankara, Katsina State. They were released seven days later.

On 17 February 2021, another group of bandits stormed the Government Science College, Kagara, Niger State, abducting 42 students and staff members.

Exactly a week later, the students were released and taken first to the Government House in Gusau for a medical check-up before being returned to their parents. The government also shut down the school.

In the case of the Jangebe school, the tragic incident marked the last time many of the students saw some of their classmates. It also marked the beginning of a series of events that altered the course of some students’ lives.

In January, PREMIUM TIMES compiled a list of 104 students and interviewed about a dozen of them, their parents, and GGSS Jangebe staff members. It was found that most of the students, now living in different communities, had put that incident behind them and forged ahead.

While some are attending different secondary schools, others are in tertiary institutions. However, some have not been able to continue their education in the aftermath of the incident.

–NAMEAGEMARITAL STATUSCLASS IN JANGEBE SCHOOL AFTER JANGEBE
1KHADIJA MASARUKU19SINGLE JSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
2AISHA IBRAHIM16SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
3ZAINAB YUNUSA 17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
4RUKAYYA LAWALI18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
5FATIMA NASIRU18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
6FIRDAUSI KABIRU23MARRIEDJSS 3NONE
7NAFISA LAWALI14SINGLE JSS 1NONE
8HAUWAU HASSAN 20SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
9SHAFA'ATU HAMZA 20SINGLE SS 1GGDSS ANKA
10YUSUFA'U NASIRU 15SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA
11HAFSATU SALISU16SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
12AISHA ADAMU17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
13AMINATU IBRAHIM18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
14ADIYATU ANAS19SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
15AISHA LAWALI15SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
16MARYAM ABDULKADIR 16SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
17SADIYA IBRAHIM 17SINGLE JSS 1GGDSS ANKA
18MARYM MUHAMMAD 15SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
19NAJAATU UMAR 19MARRIEDSS 1GGDSS ANKA
20AISHA SHEHU13SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA
21AISHA BELLO16SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
22AMINATU IBRAHIM15SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
23NUSAIBA ABDULLAHI20MARRIEDJSS 3GGDSS ANKA
24FATIMA KABIRU18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
25FATIMA MUSTAPHA 14SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
26NAFISA LAWALI15SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
27HAFSATU ISIYAKA16SINGLE JSS 1GGDSS ANKA
28AMATULLAHI LAWALI 18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
29HADIZA IBRAHIM 19SINGLE SS 1GGDSS ANKA
30SADIYA LAWALI 17SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA
31FATIMA SANI 13SINGLE NOGGDSS ANKA
32AMINA SHEHU 20MARRIEDJSS 3GGDSS ANKA
33FADILA LAWALI23MARRIEDJSS 3GGDSS ANKA
34AMINA MUHAMMAD 25MARRIEDJSS 3GGDSS ANKA
35HADIZA IBRAHIM 18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
36SAFIYA SANI 17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
37UMMA BELLO 15SINGLE JSS 1NONE
38HADIYA ABUBAKAR 19SINGLE JSS 3NONE
39ASIYA MUSA CIROMA 15SINGLE SS 1NONE
40BELAU BASHAR 17SINGLE JSS 2NONE
41NUSAIBA BUHARI 13SINGLE JSS 3NONE
42RUMASSAU BUHARI16SINGLE JSS 3NONE
43ZARAU AYUBA 17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
44MARYAM HARUNA15SINGLE JSS 3SKYSOAR ANKA
45ZAINAB SAADU 19MARRIEDJSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
46FARIDA IBRAHIM 20MARRIEDJSS 3GGDSS ANKA
47MANSURA SANI 21MARRIEDJSS 1NONE
48YUSURA ABDULLAHI 22MARRIEDJSS 3NONE
49ZABBAU HASSAN 23MARRIEDSS 1GGDSS ANKA
50FATIMA YUSUF 24MARRIEDJSS 2GGDSS ANKA
51AMINATU YUSUF 19SINGLE JSS 3NONE
52HAIRATU LAWALI 15SINGLE JSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
53ZUWAIRA IBRAHIM 14SINGLE JSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
54ZAINAB LAWALI 19MARRIEDJSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
55AISHA IBRAHIM 18SINGLE JSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
56SARATU IBRAHIM 17SINGLE JSS 3NONE
57HADIZA ABDULLAHI 16SINGLE JSS 1NONE
58FATIMA ALIYU 17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
59FADILA IBRAHIM 19SINGLE SS 1NONE
60AISHA BELLO 18SINGLE JSS 2NONE
61SHAFAATU IBRAHIM 20SINGLE JSS 3NONE
62ZAINAB ABBAKAR 223SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
63SAADATU ABBAKAR 218SINGLE JSS 3NONE
64HAFSAT BASHAR 21SINGLE JSS 3NONE
65AISHA ABBAKAR 215SINGLE JSS 3NONE
66ASIYA ABBAKAR 214SINGLE JSS 1SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
67ASIYA AHAMAD 16SINGLE JSS 3SKYSOAR ANKA
68NANA FIDDAUSI SANI 15SINGLE SS 1SKYSOAR ANKA
69RUKAYYA LAWALI19SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA
70HAUWAU AHMAD 17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
71HAFIZA AHMAD 18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
72ZARAU ABBAKAR 16SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
73AMINA ZUBAIRU 14SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
74MARYAM SANUSI 19SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
75AISHA LAWALI 20SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
76KHADIJA IBRAHIM 21SINGLE JSS 1GGDSS ANKA
77FATIMA UMAR 23SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
78FATIMA MUSA 26SINGLE SS 1GGDSS ANKA
79FIDDAUSI NASIRU 21SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA
80NAFISA KABIRU 20SINGLE JSS 3SKYSOAR ANKA
81HAUWAU LAWALI23SINGLE JSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
82SHAFAATU HASSAN 22SINGLE JSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
83YUSURA HAMZA 19SINGLE JSS 3SPECIAL MUSLIM ACADEMY
84HAFSAT NASIRU 15SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
85AISHA SALISU 17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
86AMINATU ADAMU 16SINGLE JSS 1GGDSS ANKA
87AISHA LAWALI 14SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
88MARYAM ABDULLAHI 20SINGLE SS 1GGDSS ANKA
89SADIYA IBRAHIM 21SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA
90BALKISU SANI 17SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
91HAUWAU NASIRU 15SINGLE SS 1GGDSS ANKA
92ASMAU ALIYU 16SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA
93AMINA ABDULLAHI 14SINGLE SS 1GGDSS ANKA
94SAFIYA MUHAMMAD 18SINGLE SS 2SKYSOAR ANKA
95AMINATU MUHAMMAD 19SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
96SADIYA LAWALI CIROMA 21MARRIEDJSS 3GGDSS ANKA
97ZAINAB HASSAN BAGEGA 20MARRIEDJSS 3NONE
98AISHA NASIR 18SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
99HAUWAU NURA 21MARRIEDJSS 1GGDSS ANKA
100ASMAU ALIYU 15SINGLE JSS 3GGDSS ANKA
101NANA FIDDAUSI SANI 20SINGLE SS 1GGDSS ANKA
102FATIMA ISAH 18MARRIEDJSS 2GGDSS ANKA
103SAFIYA ISAH 19SINGLE JSS 3SARKIN ZAMFARA
104FARIDA LAWALI19SINGLE JSS 2GGDSS ANKA

‘A lot changed’

After returning from the bandits’ captivity, Mrs Lawal remained at home in Anka for some months before she and other girls were asked to continue their education at the Government Girls Day Secondary School (GGDSS), Anka. But she couldn’t cope in school.

“A lot changed when we came back,” she said. “Just the nature of schooling here is not the same. I prefer it there (GGSS Jangebe).”

Though she was then in SS 1 and would have sat for the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) by 2024, she dropped out and married in December 2022.

When she narrated this story in January, four years after the incident, her life had changed drastically. She was no longer a girl – she was now a secondary school dropout, a wife, and the mother of an 11-month-old son, a choice she said felt okay at the time.

Fatima Musa, 18, also enrolled at GGDSS Anka and sat the WASSCE in 2024. However, she hasn’t considered further education or even checked her examination results.

“When we wrote (WASSCE), there’s no money to say I’ll apply for admission or anything. That’s why,” she said.

Twenty of the 104 students whose details this newspaper compiled did not complete secondary school education.

Insecurity and Education

In the last decade, insecurity in Northern Nigeria has affected education, from the shutting of schools to the abduction of students.

Since the first recorded mass abduction of 276 girls at Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, by Boko Haram terrorists in 2014, more than 1,700 students and teachers have been abducted in Northern Nigeria, according to data compiled by SBM Intelligence.

As mass abduction of students reduced in Boko Haram’s stronghold in the North-east, it has grown in the North-west with the rise of banditry in rural communities, with Zamfara as the most affected state.

PREMIUM TIMES reported last year how years of insecurity and mass abductions in the region have crippled basic education and led to the closure of over 60 primary and secondary schools.

According to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), Nigeria has over 20 million out-of-school children, with the ‘degenerating security’ situation in the region described as a major driver.

Not all gloomy

However, some of the abducted GGSS Jangebe girls continued schooling and are excelling.
After her primary school in Anka, Aisha Nasir, now 17, enrolled at GGSS Jangebe in 2020. She was in JSS2 when they were abducted.

“I resumed on Sunday, and the abduction happened on Thursday,” she recalled.
While in captivity, Aisha, now 17, was one of the youngest and was responsible for fetching water while the older students cooked.

“They cook rice and beans. We fetch water, and they put our portion in a sack,” she said.

Aisha Nasir grew wary of schooling after the abduction. Picture: Qosim Suleiman
Aisha Nasir grew wary of schooling after the abduction. Picture: Qosim Suleiman

When they returned, Miss Nasir said she didn’t think about going back to school because she “started getting disinterested.”

However, she was forced to re-enroll at GGDSS Anka. “Gradually, I started getting interested again,” she said.
Now, in SS3, she will sit the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) this year.

Some months after their return home, there was an announcement in Anka for all the girls from GGSS Jangebe to converge at a location close to the house of the district head. There, the students were advised not to lose hope in education because of what had happened to them.

“They told us it was fate, and it could’ve happened to anyone,” Firdausi Sani, one of the students, said.
But Ms Sani’s parents took her to a private school where she is now in SS1.

Beyond Secondary School

Farida Lawali’s parents are not one to leave their daughter without education. Shortly after the students’ release from captivity, Farida’s parents took her to the Government Girls Secondary School, Maru, even though she wanted to quit schooling. “It wasn’t up to a month (after the release),” she recalled. “My father wanted me to go to school so he took me there (GGSS Maru).”

“We were thrown into sadness during their abduction, but we finally admitted it as her fate as destined by God. We were excited when they got back safely. So, we decided that she would go back to school immediately,” Farida’s mother, Ruqayya Muhammad, recalled.

Farida Lawali completed her National Certificate of Education (NCE) in Primary Education at the Zamfara State College of Education, Maru. Picture: Qosim Suleiman
Farida Lawali completed her National Certificate of Education (NCE) in Primary Education at the Zamfara State College of Education, Maru. Picture: Qosim Suleiman

In 2023, Ms Lawali (not related to Sadiya) sat for WASSCE and was offered admission into the Zamfara State College of Education Maru, where she studied for a National Certificate of Education (NCE) in Primary Education. In December 2024, she sat her final examinations at the college and is awaiting her results.
“Now that she’s done with her NCE, we are happy that we gave her the foundation of education,” Farida’s mother added.

Last year, Zainab Ibrahim sat the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) and is now studying for a National Diploma in Medical Laboratory Science and Community Health at Sarkin Zamfara Ahmadu College of Health Sciences and Technology. However, she plans to register for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) to seek admission into the Federal University, Gusau.

“I want to study Nursing, but my father wants me to study Medical Laboratory Science. So, I started at Sarkin Zamfara College of Health,” she said.

GGSS Jangebe Today

On a Tuesday morning in January at GGSS Jangebe, about a dozen girls in mint green gowns, trousers, and flowing white hijab walked through a narrow walkway surrounded by bushes towards blocks of buildings that were once their hostels.

They gazed with amusement and intermittent chuckles at the dust and cobwebs covering the hostel’s walls, floors, and bunks — the only remnants of the building.

“This was our room,” one of them pointed at a hall, almost excitedly. It was their first time at the hostels since their abduction four years ago.

The students were among the few who returned to GGSS Jangebe after it reopened in April 2022. The majority of the students who came from different communities no longer school here. Before it was reopened, the Zamfara State Government converted the boarding school into a daily school, making it impossible for students from far away to attend.

Asmau Yusuf stands beside what used to be her bed some four years ago. Photo Credit: Qosim Suleiman
Asmau Yusuf stands beside what used to be her bed some four years ago. Photo Credit: Qosim Suleiman

Since the conversion, the school has seen less student population, the vice-principal, Nuradden Sulaiman, told PREMIUM TIMES.

“We used to have over 1000 students, but we currently have less than 500,” he said. “We have 10 classes. But only nine are occupied.”

Aside from the abandoned hostels behind the block of classrooms, the school showed no signs of the horror that occurred there four years ago. The school building, classrooms, and furniture, as seen by PREMIUM TIMES, appear intact.

The school has a science laboratory with burettes, pipettes, and human skeleton anatomy models. It also has a computer laboratory with over 30 desktop computers, even though they appeared abandoned.

Mr Sulaiman said the computers were not used as often as necessary due to the lack of constant electricity.

“We use them for practicals, and we have a generator, but due to the high cost of fueling it, we can’t always afford to fuel it,” he said.

Science Laboratory at GGSS Jangebe Picture: Qosim Suleiman
Science Laboratory at GGSS Jangebe Picture: Qosim Suleiman

Despite the electricity challenges, staff and students say they believe the security situation in the community has improved.

READ ALSO: ANALYSIS: Examining social media claims linking USAID to terrorism, food insecurity in Nigeria

According to the vice-principal, the security situation in the community has improved since the abduction.
Mr Sulaiman has many expectations for the school’s operations. He fondly remembers how the school was when he was first posted there in 2020.

“If possible, the boarding system should resume,” he said.
But for Sadiya Lawal, GGSS Jangebe is the ideal classroom she could never return to.

Page planned and produced by: Aaron Cole

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Katsina bans fuel sales in jerrycans, motorcycles in two LGAs over insecurity

June 16, 2026
Kenneth Okonkwo pictured at the media screening of Living in Bondage in Lagos

ADC: Okonkwo kicks against Amaechi’s choice as Atiku’s running mate

June 16, 2026
A cross-section of the NYSC Batch B Corp members during their closing ceremony at Wailo NYSC Permanent Orientation Camp in Bauchi on Monday (13/8/18). 04366/14/8/2018/Deji Yake/JMH/HB/NAN

NYSC raises security concerns over shared access to Katsina orientation camp

June 16, 2026
Prominent businessman and farmer in Katsina State, Bala Sanin Kawo

Katsina businessman reportedly killed after bandits collected ransom

June 16, 2026
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