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UPDATE 1 -Police free hundreds of males, some chained and beaten, from Nigerian school in third raid this month

Published 16/10/2019, 17:20
Updated 16/10/2019, 17:27
UPDATE 1 -Police free hundreds of males, some chained and beaten, from Nigerian school in third raid this month

By Abdullahi Inuwa

KATSINA, Nigeria, Oct 16 (Reuters) - Police freed about 500

men and boys from an Islamic school in northern Nigeria on

Wednesday, many of whom had been chained to walls, molested and

beaten, police sources said.

The raid in Katsina was the third such operation in less

than a month, bringing the total of people freed from abusive

conditions this month alone to about 1,000.

President Muhammadu Buhari's government is under pressure to

take urgent action to free the potentially thousands of other

children who remain in similar schools across Nigeria.

Another purported Islamic school, where captives were

chained to walls, some beaten so badly they needed help walking,

was raided in September in neighbording Kaduna state.

Two sources at the scene told Reuters that the owner of the

Mal. Niga school in Katsina metropolis and five of his staff had

been arrested. Police declined to comment on the raid and

blocked entrance to the grounds.

The operation, mounted by Katsina police and federal police

from Abuja, freed about 500 students though not all of them had

been mistreated, a police source said.

One building, which was well-kept, with clean tiles on the

exterior and working plumbing, held 300 pupils who were not

regularly mistreated. But about 200 captives at a site next door

were regularly abused.

"The second camp is the dangerous place," a police source

said. "The children were molested there."

The source said the most unruly students and some newcomers

were placed in the second building. Students at the first school

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were sometimes taken to the second building for abuse.

Islamic schools, called Almajiris, are common in the mostly

Muslim north of Nigeria. Muslim Rights Concern, a local

organisation, estimates about 10 million children attend them.

At the other raided facilities, some parents thought their

children would be educated and even paid tuition. Other families

sent misbehaving or difficult family members and wards to them

for discipline. Buhari, whose home state is Katsina, said in June that he

planned to ban Almajiris eventually but would not do so right

away.

On Tuesday, an aide said Buhari had directed police: "Go out

in search of these kind of centres wherever they are and disband

them."

The centres referred to the places where people are

maltreated in the name of religion, the aide said. The statement

did not address Almajiris at large.

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