menu

Ayobami Blog

close

© 2015 - 2026 Copyright of AyobamiBlog. All rights reserved.

Latest News:
GLOBAL RECOGNITION: Call Him ‘Sir’ Idris Elba! Hollywood Superstar Decorated With Prestigious British Knighthood By King Charles IIICYBER ALERT: Hackers Launch 2,000 Attacks On Nigeria’s Data Protection Agency In Just Seven DaysSENSATIONAL: Secret 600-Metre Underground Tunnel Uncovered Beneath US-Mexico Border; $45 Million Worth of Cocaine SeizedJAPA' CRISIS: US Moves to Slash Visa-Processing Embassies in Africa to Just 20, Raising Travel FearsSuccess Quote and Quote of the Day.Supreme Court Sets D-Day For FIRS, Bayelsa State Over Controversial ₦5.5 Billion Tax DisputeEU Regulators Slam Chinese E-Commerce Giant, Temu, With Massive €200 Million Fine Over Illegal ProductsU.S. renews strikes on Iran, citing threats posed to American troopsSuccess Quote and Quote of the Day.Dozens of Romance Scammers, Fraudsters Bagged in Massive Joint UK-Nigeria Syndicate CrackdownGLOBAL RECOGNITION: Call Him ‘Sir’ Idris Elba! Hollywood Superstar Decorated With Prestigious British Knighthood By King Charles IIICYBER ALERT: Hackers Launch 2,000 Attacks On Nigeria’s Data Protection Agency In Just Seven DaysSENSATIONAL: Secret 600-Metre Underground Tunnel Uncovered Beneath US-Mexico Border; $45 Million Worth of Cocaine SeizedJAPA' CRISIS: US Moves to Slash Visa-Processing Embassies in Africa to Just 20, Raising Travel FearsSuccess Quote and Quote of the Day.Supreme Court Sets D-Day For FIRS, Bayelsa State Over Controversial ₦5.5 Billion Tax DisputeEU Regulators Slam Chinese E-Commerce Giant, Temu, With Massive €200 Million Fine Over Illegal ProductsU.S. renews strikes on Iran, citing threats posed to American troopsSuccess Quote and Quote of the Day.Dozens of Romance Scammers, Fraudsters Bagged in Massive Joint UK-Nigeria Syndicate Crackdown
Link Copied to Clipboard

Nigeria kidnappers kill 38 hostages even after ransom paid

By Esther
Updated July 28, 2025 4:00 pm
AdvertisementAdvertisement

In March, heavily armed gunmen stormed Banga village in Kauran Namoda local government area, seizing 56 villagers. The assailants, locally dubbed “bandits,” have increasingly turned to mass kidnappings as a revenue source amid worsening insecurity.

The kidnappers set the ransom at one million naira per person. After protracted negotiations, the full payment was delivered. On Saturday, the bandits freed 18 captives—17 women and one young boy—who were promptly taken to a hospital for treatment.

Despite the ransom handover, the gunmen executed 38 hostages, predominantly young people. Local chairman Manniru Haidara Kaura condemned the killings, likening the slaughter to the senseless butchering of livestock and lamenting that the perpetrators “forgot they were killing their own brothers.”

AdvertisementAdvertisement

In 2022, Nigeria passed a law outlawing ransom payments, punishable by at least 15 years in prison, and imposed the death penalty for kidnappers whose victims die. To date, no one has been prosecuted under these provisions, and families continue to pay ransoms to secure the return of their loved ones.

Villagers are gripped by fear and anger. Many blame state authorities for failing to provide basic security, forcing desperate families into impossible dilemmas: pay criminals or risk the lives of their relatives.

The Banga massacre lays bare the brutal logic of Nigeria’s kidnapping economy and the government’s struggle to enforce laws meant to deter it. Until security is restored and kidnappers held to account, communities will remain trapped between extortion and annihilation.

Credit: BBC


Discover more from Ayobami Blog

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Share:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.