Connect with us

Published

on

Gunmen who kidnapped at least 286 students and staff from a school in Nigeria have demanded one billion naira – the equivalent of £486,000 – for their release, community leaders have said.

The children and adults were abducted last Thursday in Kuriga, a town in Nigeria‘s north-western Kaduna State.

At least 100 of the pupils are aged 12 or younger.

Jubril Aminu, a spokesperson for the families of the hostages, said the kidnappers threatened to kill the captives during a phone call on Tuesday.

“They gave an ultimatum to pay the ransom within 20 days, effective from the date of the kidnap,” he said. “They said they will kill all the students and the staff if the ransom demand is not met.”

Local councillor Idris Ibrahim said the kidnappers had called from an undisclosed number that authorities were trying to trace.

The ransom demand is the equivalent of more than £1,600 per hostage – which is more than the average income a person in Nigeria earns in a year, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Sky’s Yousra Elbagir reports from the town where 286 people were kidnapped last week

Rashidat Hamza is one of many parents left in despair after five of her six children, aged between seven and 18, were kidnapped.

“We don’t know what to do, but we believe in God,” she said on Saturday.

Read more from Sky News:
UK sends full field hospital to Gaza
British couple die on Caribbean island

Rocket explodes seconds after lift-off

Shehu Lawal, the father of a 13-year-old boy who is among those feared kidnapped, added: “Since this happened, my brain has been muddled.

“My child didn’t even eat breakfast before leaving. His mother fainted [at the news].”

The Nigerian government has urged the country’s security forces to secure the release of the hostages “as a matter of urgency” without paying any ransom, information minister Mohammed Idris said on Wednesday.

A boy holds a sign to protest against, what a teacher, local councillor and parents said, the kidnapping of hundreds school pupils by gunmen after the Friday prayer, in Kaduna, Nigeria March 8, 2024. Pic: Reuters
Image:
A boy holds a sign during an anti-kidnap protest last week. Pic: Reuters

The raid on 7 March was initially thought to be Nigeria’s first mass kidnapping since 2021, but it later emerged that 50 people, mostly women, had also been adducted by suspected insurgents in the remote Gamboru region on 6 March.

A third mass kidnapping then took place on Saturday when 15 children and one woman were taken from the Gidan Bakuso village in Sokoto state.

Nigerian army patrol near LEA Primary and Secondary School Kuriga where students were kidnapped in Kuriga, Kaduna, Nigeria, Saturday, March 9, 2024. Security forces swept through large forests in Nigeria's northwest region on Friday in search of nearly 300 children who were abducted from their school a day earlier in the West African nation's latest mass kidnap which analysts and activists blamed on the failure of intelligence and slow security response. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)
Image:
Nigerian soldiers on patrol in the region over the weekend. Pic: AP Photo/Sunday Alamba

In 2014, Islamist militants kidnapped hundreds of schoolgirls from Chibok in Borno State, sparking the Bring Back Our Girls campaign.

A decade later, officials estimate at least 1,4000 Nigerian students have been kidnapped in similar circumstances and some – including nearly 100 of the Chibok girls – remain missing.

Bola Tinubu won Nigeria’s presidential race last year after campaigning on a promise to tighten security and stop kidnappings.

Continue Reading

World

Vaccine reminder as mpox strain spreads in Europe

Published

on

By

Vaccine reminder as mpox strain spreads in Europe

Health officials are calling for people to ensure they are vaccinated against mpox, as there are indications the ‘clade Ib’ strain has spread locally in some European nations.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) says it is aware of small numbers of cases of this strain in Portugal, Spain, Italy and the Netherlands, as well as the US.

It says most of the new cases identified have been in gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men, a population in which clade Ib mpox transmission has not previously been observed.

There are 16 clade Ib cases in the UK to date – all in England and unrelated to transmission within GBMSM (Gay, bisexual and other men-who-have-sex-with-men) community, a spokesperson for the agency said.

“The ways in which we are seeing mpox continue to spread globally is a reminder to come forward for the vaccine, if you are eligible,” said Dr Katy Sinka, head of sexually transmitted infections at UKHSA.

The UK has a routine mpox vaccination programme in place for eligible groups, including those who:

  • have multiple sexual partners
  • have group sex
  • visit sex-on-premises venues

Although there are no studies on vaccine effectiveness against clade Ib mpox, studies show that the vaccine is around 75 to 80% effective in protecting people against clade II.

The UKHSA said that since the last technical assessment on 19 December last year, the “probability of importation into the UK has increased from medium to high”.

The agency said, however, that the risk of onwards transmission in the UK is “likely to be controlled to some degree by the existing GBMSM vaccination programme and remains low to medium at present”.

Mpox is generally a mild infection, and clade Ib and la strains are no longer classified as a high-consequence infectious disease, but it can be severe in some cases, the UKHSA said.

Read more:
Activists who hoped to spray paint Taylor Swift’s jet spared jail
Zelenskyy: Ukraine will work on ceasefire plan within next 10 days

Charities have also called for people to get vaccinated prior to travelling to autumn Winter Pride events in Europe.

Common mpox symptoms include a skin rash or pus-filled lesions, which can last two to four weeks.

The infection can also cause fever, headaches, muscle aches, back pain, low energy and swollen lymph nodes.

Continue Reading

World

Ukraine will work on ceasefire plan within next 10 days, Volodymyr Zelenskyy says

Published

on

By

Ukraine will work on ceasefire plan within next 10 days, Volodymyr Zelenskyy says

Ukraine and its allies have agreed to work on a ceasefire plan in the next 10 days, Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said.

The Ukrainian president made the remarks after a proposal from US President Donald Trump to stop the war at its current frontlines.

“Some quick points – like a plan for a ceasefire. We decided we will work on it in the next week or 10 days,” Mr Zelenskyy told Axios.

He said Ukraine – partly in an attempt to pressure Russia into talks – was asking the US administration not only for Tomahawk missiles but for “similar things” that do not require lengthy training before Ukrainian military personnel can use them.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Moment Russian soldiers surrender in Ukraine war

On the ground, Ukraine has moved to strengthen its positions in the strategic eastern city of Pokrovsk, as groups of Russian troops infiltrated the city, Kyiv’s military said.

Ukrainian officials said Russian troops have renewed their attempts to capture the key transport hub in the Donetsk region.

“The occupiers, who have entered the city, are not trying to take hold, but intend to advance further north,” the 7th Rapid Response Unit of Ukraine’s airborne troops said in a Facebook post.

“In doing so, the enemy wants to disperse our defence forces and block land logistics corridors.”

Mr Zelenskyy said Russia has concentrated its main strike force against Pokrovsk.

“There is fierce fighting in the city and on the approaches to the city… Logistics are difficult. But we must continue to destroy the occupiers,” he said.

Citing Ukrainian intelligence in his interview with Axios, Mr Zelenskyy said Russian President Vladimir Putin had privately claimed Moscow would capture the entire Donbas – comprising the regions of Donetsk and Luhansk – by 15 October.

Read more from Sky News:
Sanctions alone won’t force Putin to end Ukraine war
Trump ‘100% open’ to meeting Kim Jong Un

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Russia launches huge strike on Ukraine

Russia tests ‘Skyfall’ nuclear missile’

It comes after Russia tested a new nuclear-powered and nuclear-capable cruise missile, which Mr Putin said could dodge existing defences.

Development of the Burevestnik missile, codenamed Skyfall by NATO, was first revealed by Mr Putin in 2018, when he claimed it would have an unlimited range, allowing it to circle the globe undetected by missile defence systems.

In 2019, five nuclear engineers and two service members were killed in an explosion when Russian experts reportedly tried to recover a Burevestnik prototype that had crashed into the White Sea during tests.

‘Get the war ended,’ Trump tells Putin

Mr Trump, speaking during an official trip from Kuala Lumpur to Tokyo, said Mr Putin’s talk about missiles was not “appropriate”.

“You’ve got to get the war ended. A war that should have taken one week is now in its soon fourth year,” he said. “That’s what you ought to do, instead of testing missiles.”

A Kremlin spokesperson claimed the missile reflects Moscow’s determination to look out for its security interests.

“Russia is consistently working to ensure its own security,” Dmitry Peskov said when asked if the missile announcement was a response to tough new US sanctions imposed on Russia and a signal to the West.

“Ensuring security is a vital issue for Russia, especially against the backdrop of the militaristic sentiment that we are currently hearing, primarily from the Europeans,” he added.

Continue Reading

World

Ten on trial over ‘malicious’ online comments claiming Brigitte Macron is a man

Published

on

By

Ten on trial over 'malicious' online comments claiming Brigitte Macron is a man

Ten people accused of cyberbullying Brigitte Macron are going on trial in Paris after allegedly making “malicious” comments claiming the French first lady is a man.

Emmanuel Macron‘s wife has long been the subject of conspiracy theories saying she was born a man named Jean-Michel Trogneux (her brother’s name), and took the name Brigitte as a transgender woman.

Eight men and two women are accused of making posts repeating the claims, as well as others about her sexuality and mentioning the 24-year age gap to her husband as “paedophilia”.

The accused are between 41 and 60 and include a teacher, computer scientist, an elected official, and a woman who presents herself as a medium and advertising executive.

The trial, due to begin Monday, is expected to last two days and comes after the Macrons filed a defamation case in the US this summer over conservative influencer Candace Owens repeating the claims.

The French president has claimed that taking legal action against Ms Owens was about “defending his honour”,

Mrs Macron and her brother won also another French defamation case last year against two women who were initially ordered to pay damages and a fine.

More on Emmanuel Macron

However, the decision was overturned and Mrs Macron and her brother have appealed to France’s highest court.

The Macrons met at a secondary school where Brigitte was teaching when Emmanuel was 15. They married in 2007 and Mr Macron became president in 2017.

Earlier this year, the first lady was caught on camera pushing her husband in the face as he prepared to get off a plane.

Mr Macron later said it was a case of “simply joking with my wife as we often do”.

Read more from Sky News:
24 hours in the kill zone in Ukraine
Hurricane set to slam Jamaica with 140mph winds and floods

The trial also comes as France deals with an ongoing political crisis that saw its prime minister resign only to be reappointed days later, as well as continuing attention over the audacious robbery of jewels from the Louvre.

Continue Reading

Trending