TD
The Department of State Services (DSS) has announced a major breakthrough in Nigeria’s fight against school kidnappings, arresting five suspects, including two foreigners, linked to the November 2025 abduction at St. Mary’s Catholic Secondary School in Papiri, Niger State.
DSS Director-General Tosin Ajayi confirmed that the operation led to the recovery of 15 AK rifles, magazines, and assorted ammunition.
The arrest underscores the scale of weaponry available to criminal gangs terrorizing communities.
The Papiri Attack
The arrests come months after the November 21, 2025, assault.
Heavily armed terrorists had stormed St. Mary’s Catholic Secondary School in Papiri between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m., abducting an unspecified number of students.
Witnesses reported that the attackers overwhelmed local security personnel before seizing victims from both primary and secondary sections of the Catholic-owned boarding school.
When journalists arrived later that morning, the school was completely deserted, with parents and residents frantically searching for answers.

Conflicting reports suggested dozens of victims, with some sources estimating numbers exceeding 100.
A security guard was injured during the raid, though no deaths were recorded.
The Papiri incident occurred just days after 25 schoolgirls were kidnapped from Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School in Maga, Kebbi State.
The incidents have deepening national anxiety over Nigeria’s worsening security crisis.
Official Response to the Disturbing Pattern
Mohammed Inuwa, a senior legislative aide to Rt. Hon. Jafar Muhammad Ali (Shattiman Borgu), confirmed the Papiri incident at the time.
Ali noted that police and military forces had launched forest searches.
Authorities also probed whether the school had violated a government directive against boarding facilities in high-risk areas.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, already under pressure over the Kebbi abductions, dispatched the Minister of State for Defence to Niger State in response.
However, critics argued that government action remained reactive rather than preventive.
The Papiri abduction marked the second major school kidnapping within a week, echoing the horrors of Chibok (2014), Dapchi (2018), and mass abductions in Zamfara and Kaduna.
Security analysts warn that the proximity of these incidents reflects renewed confidence among terrorist factions operating across Nigeria’s northwest forests.
Significance of DSS Arrests
The DSS operation is being hailed as a significant step forward.
Analysts note that the inclusion of foreign suspects highlights the cross-border dimensions of Nigeria’s insecurity.
Meanwhile, the seizure of assault rifles demonstrates the firepower criminal groups wield.
Parents and teachers across Niger State expressed cautious relief at the arrests.
They, however, stressed that systemic reforms and proactive security measures are urgently needed to safeguard schools.
With two major abductions in under a week last November, Nigeria’s education sector remains in crisis.
The DSS breakthrough offers hope, but observers warn that sustained pressure and accountability are critical.
Without them, they noted, such successes may remain isolated victories in a broader war against insecurity.














