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Dozens Kidnapped in Northwest Nigeria After Bandits Invite Them to Talks

ABUJA, June 8 (Reuters) – Armed bandits in ⁠northwest ⁠Nigeria abducted dozens of ⁠villagers whom they invited to a meeting about ​potential peace negotiations, authorities and residents said on Monday, highlighting the ‌region’s worsening security.

Police said 39 ‌people were seized on Sunday when they went to ⁠a ⁠meeting in the forest near Magamin Diddi village in the ​Maradun municipality of northwest Zamfara State. Some local residents and officials said the number could be as high as 50.

According to a ​Zamfara State Police Command statement, the victims were meeting relatives ⁠of a ⁠bandit leader in ⁠an ​attempt to broker peace and ease restrictions on movement imposed on the ​community.

Zamfara is at ⁠the centre of a long-running security crisis in which armed groups, locally referred to as bandits, carry out mass kidnappings, killings and village raids. The violence has disrupted farming and ⁠displaced thousands.

Security forces have deployed personnel and intelligence assets to locate ⁠the victims, the police statement added.

Several individuals were reported by locals to have been released to convey the kidnappers’ ransom demands back to the village.

Bashar Aliyu, a resident of Magamin Diddi, said the armed group was demanding 125 million naira ($91,880) for the release of those abducted.

In many communities, residents have resorted to negotiating directly with armed ⁠groups to gain access to farmland or secure the release of abductees, a practice authorities have discouraged but struggled to prevent.

(Reporting by Hamza Ibrahim in Kano ​and Ahmed Kingimi in Maiduguri; Writing by Chijioke ​Ohuocha; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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