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Two Abducted UTME Candidates Escape from Kidnappers

Two Abducted UTME Candidates Escape from Kidnappers

Somto NwanoluebySomto Nwanolue
21 minutes ago
in Government
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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They were on their way to write their future. Fourteen young people, packed into a commercial bus, are heading to the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination. Then the unthinkable happened. Kidnappers struck.

Now, two of them are free. The rest are still in captivity.

The Benue State Police Command has confirmed that two UTME candidates who were among the passengers abducted in a commercial bus have escaped from their captors. The police added that efforts are being made to rescue the other abducted candidates.

The vehicle involved was a Toyota Hiace bus with registration number BGT 234 S4, belonging to Benue Links Limited. About 14 candidates traveling to Otukpo for the UTME were abducted. Two found a way out. Twelve remain missing.

One suspect has been arrested in connection with the incident. But that arrest is cold comfort for the families still waiting for news of their children.

Two Abducted UTME Candidates Escape from Kidnappers

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • The Driver’s Deadly Mistake
  • The Search Continues
  • The Bigger Picture
  • The Bottom Line

The Driver’s Deadly Mistake

The police have identified a critical factor in the abduction: the driver’s decision to violate company policy. According to the Police Public Relations Officer, Udeme Edet, the driver embarked on an unauthorised late-night journey. He picked up passengers randomly along the route without issuing a formal manifest — a direct violation of Benue Links Limited’s standard operating procedures.

The absence of a manifest is not a bureaucratic detail. It is a security failure. A manifest documents who is on the bus, where they boarded, and where they are going. Without it, tracking passengers becomes nearly impossible. The driver’s negligence did not cause the abduction, but it made the aftermath far more difficult. The police cannot easily identify all the victims. Families cannot easily confirm who was on the bus. And the kidnappers knew exactly what they were targeting: a bus operating outside the rules, carrying young passengers with families desperate to pay ransoms.

The Search Continues

The police command has deployed several tactical teams, including the Anti-Kidnapping Unit, and is working with other sister agencies to track down the perpetrators and ensure the safe return of the victims. That is the official line. But the reality on the ground is more complicated. Kidnapping for ransom has become a booming criminal enterprise in Nigeria, particularly in regions like Benue, where security forces are stretched thin, and bandits operate with near impunity.

The two candidates who escaped have not yet publicly shared how they got away. That information could be critical for the rescue efforts of the remaining victims — or it could compromise ongoing police operations. The command has not disclosed the method of escape.

What is clear is that the abduction has sent shockwaves through the community. Fourteen young people, most of them teenagers, were taken while pursuing an education. Their families are now living a nightmare.

The Bigger Picture

This abduction is not an isolated incident. It is part of a pattern. Across Nigeria, students, travelers, and ordinary citizens are being snatched from roads, schools, and homes. The government has launched military operations. It has declared war on banditry. But the abductions continue.

The UTME candidates were particularly vulnerable. They were traveling at night. They were in a bus without a manifest. They were young, unarmed, and easy targets. The kidnappers knew exactly what they were doing. And until the government addresses the root causes of insecurity — the economic desperation that fuels banditry, the porous borders that allow criminals to operate freely, the inadequate policing that leaves roads unprotected — these abductions will not stop.

The police have arrested one suspect. That is a start. But one arrest will not dismantle a kidnapping network. And the twelve candidates still in captivity cannot wait for a long-term solution. They need rescue now.

The Bottom Line

So what happened in Benue State? About 14 UTME candidates traveling to Otukpo for their examination were abducted from a commercial bus. Two of them have escaped from their captors. The police are working to rescue the remaining victims. One suspect has been arrested. The driver violated company policy by embarking on an unauthorised late-night journey and picking up passengers without issuing a manifest.

 

Tags: federal charactergovernmentKidnappersNewsNigeriaUtme
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Somto Nwanolue

Somto Nwanolue

Somto Nwanolue is a news writer with a keen eye for spotting trending news and crafting engaging stories. Her interests includes beauty, lifestyle and fashion. Her life’s passion is to bring information to the right audience in written medium

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