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Aid Group says five workers abducted in Nigeria

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Kidnapping, usually for ransom, is common in parts of Nigeria, though abductors usually target other Nigerians. Image courtesy: Premium Times

Five humanitarian workers have been abducted by Islamist insurgence in restive northeastern Nigeria according to aid group Action Against Hunger.

The group said in a statement on Tuesday that one of its employees was among those kidnapped last month.

“Action Against Hunger condemns, in the strongest possible terms, the abduction of our employee, Ishaiku Yakubu, and we urgently call for his release,” it said.

The Paris-based organization said Yakubu was kidnapped in June by a non-state armed group along with four other humanitarian workers from different organizations.

The five, all Nigerians, have appeared in a video that surfaced this week on the Telegram messaging app.

In the footage — apparently shot on June 21 — they said they had been kidnapped by fighters aligned to the Islamic State group at different times last month and appealed to be released.

Aid workers have been repeatedly targeted by jihadists waging a decade-long insurgency in northeastern Nigeria.

Last year fighters from the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) faction abducted a group of six humanitarian workers — including a female ACF employee — in the region.

Five of the hostages were later executed and the ACF worker remains in captivity.

ISWAP splintered from jihadist group Boko Haram in 2016 and swore allegiance to then IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

The 10-year conflict in northeastern Nigeria has killed 36,000 people and displaced about two million from their homes in northeast Nigeria

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