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See How Much Sheikh Gumi Collected To Help Free Kidnapped Kaduna Students

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Sheikh Gumi Makes Case for Bandits, Says Nigerian Military Is Very Hard On Them

Sheikh Gumi has been accused of collecting money to free kidnapped Kaduna Students.

Newsone Nigeria reports that some mothers of students kidnapped in Kaduna have accused Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, an Islamic cleric, of capitalising on their challenges to make money. Speaking to journalists, the aggrieved parents narrated their ordeal in Gumi’s house.

This online news platform understands that 37 students of the Federal College of Forestry Mechanisation, Afaka in Kaduna State, northern Nigeria, were kidnapped in their school by bandits on March 11.

Out of the 37, 10 of them were released in batches of five each, leaving 27 students with their abductors, who were later released on Wednesday night.

READ ALSO: Abuja Schools Shut Down As Bandits Arrive In Truckloads

Before the release of the kidnapped Kaduna students, Gumi was criticised by some Nigerians for his position that the Federal Government led by President Muhammadu Buhari should negotiate with bandits and yield to their demands.

Sheikh Gumi collected N800,000 for transport

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One of the mothers of the kidnapped Kaduna students said, “They took us to Gumi’s house, he directed us to an Ahmed, who invited a Fulani man from Kaduna. We contributed N800,000 for him; he told us that was just for transport. I cried and pleaded with him, saying I’m a widow, that I do not have a husband. I am training the boy to help me tomorrow. He said it wasn’t his concern.

“Initially, they were after the government to pay the N500 million (ransom). But they later started calling and persuading to talk to the government to pay the money. I told them that I don’t have access to the government. After they called for two weeks with no results, they asked me, how much have you people raised, and I asked ‘which people’. They said you parents, and I told them that the parents do not have money, we are poor people, we don’t have any money to contribute. They now said, so if the government does not pay, you will allow your children to die?”

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On Tuesday, Gumi urged the government not to take the threat by the kidnappers of students of Greenfield University, Kaduna, lightly.

He noted this in an interview with Punch, saying the Central Bank of Nigeria should pay the N100 million ransom demanded by the kidnappers of the students.

Gumi made the call as a parent of one of the abductees lamented that the kidnappers were insisting on a ransom of N100 million.

No fewer than 22 students and a member of staff of the university were abducted in the school on April 20, 2021. Five of the students were later killed by the bandits.

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It was reported on Monday, that one of the bandits, Sani Jalingo, in an interview with the Hausa service of the Voice of America, demanded N100 million and 10 motorcycles for the students to be freed.

He threatened that failure of the Kaduna State Government or families of the students to meet the demands by Tuesday (yesterday), would lead to the death of the abductees.

However, the remaining twenty-seven (27) kidnapped Kaduna students were released on Wednesday evening, May 5, 2021.

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