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BackEight Children Missing After Gunmen Kidnap 23 From Unregistered Orphanage in Nigeria's Kogi State
Eight Children Missing After Gunmen Kidnap 23 From Unregistered Orphanage in Nigeria's Kogi State
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BBC World4/27/2026Crime1 min read

Eight Children Missing After Gunmen Kidnap 23 From Unregistered Orphanage in Nigeria's Kogi State

Owner also taken in raid on illegal facility; 15 children rescued in coordinated security response

Quick Look

  • Gunmen raided an unregistered orphanage in Nigeria's Kogi State on Sunday, kidnapping 23 children and taking the facility's owner.
  • Security agencies rescued 15 children, leaving eight still missing.
  • The orphanage was operating illegally in a bush environment without government knowledge.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Nigeria has experienced multiple mass school kidnappings, particularly in the northern region. In November 2025, over 300 students were abducted from a Catholic school in Niger State and released in batches. The government denies paying ransoms or releasing Boko Haram commanders. This is the first attack on an orphanage, representing a new target in the country's ongoing insecurity crisis.

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Eight children remain missing after gunmen raided an unregistered orphanage in Nigeria's north-central Kogi State and kidnapped 23 children, authorities have said. Kogi's information commissioner Kingsley Fanwo said 15 children were rescued due to the "prompt and coordinated response" of security agencies. Sunday's attack also saw the owner of the facility taken, he added. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but security sources say the state has a functional Boko Haram cell, and that there have been several violent attacks in the area. Nigeria is also grappling with a kidnap crisis in many parts of the country, with criminal gangs abducting people for ransoms. The government has made paying ransoms illegal but this has not prevented the kidnappings. "The government remains fully committed to ensuring the rescue of all the victims," Fanwo said. His statement on Monday also highlighted that the orphanage was "operating illegally" in a "bushy environment" without the knowledge of relevant authorities. Fanwo urged operators of orphanages, schools, and similar institutions to always engage appropriately with the appropriate government agencies "especially in the current security climate". Mass kidnappings in schools are not uncommon in Nigeria, especially in the country's northern region which is currently plagued by insecurity. This is the first time an orphanage has been targeted. In November 2025, more than 300 students and their teachers were abducted from one Catholic Secondary School in Niger State, also in the north central region of Nigeria. They were released in two batches with the last group regaining freedom more than one month after. The government denied reports that any ransom had been paid, or that two Boko Haram commanders had been freed as part of the deal.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Government will increase registration requirements and security inspections for orphanages

    Likely · Within weeks

  • More details on missing children and owner will emerge within days

    Very likely · Within days

Open Questions

  • Who are the gunmen responsible for the attack?
  • What is the current condition of the missing children and owner?
  • Will ransom be demanded or paid?
  • What specific security measures will be implemented for orphanages?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC World.

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