Nigerian parents say they are kept in the dark over abducted schoolchildren

PAPIRI, Nigeria (AP) — Several parents of the over 300 schoolchildren seized by armed men in thelatest mass abduction in Nigeriatell The Associated Press the government has told them nothing about rescue efforts — and the stress has been so high that one parent has died of a heart attack.

"Nobody from the government has briefed us about the abduction," said Emmanuel Ejeh, whose 12-year-old son was taken from the Catholic school in Niger state.

No armed group has claimed responsibility for Friday's abduction of 303 children from the remote community of Papiri, the latest in a series of high-profile seizures in search of ransom. Fifty of the students have since escaped.

The rise in mass abductions from schools comes as theTrump administration pressures Nigeria to actagainst what it calls the persecution of Christians there — a claim Nigeria's government denies. Such abductions had decreased in the past two years.

Experts sayMuslims suffer just as much or morefrom the attacks by bandits and militants linked to al-Qaida or the Islamic State group.

Nigeria's government has few answers

Parents have gathered at the dusty school compound in Papiri, attempting to comfort each other. Ejeh said his wife fainted after hearing their son was taken.

"It is painful," Ejeh said. "Mathew is a very kind boy who dreams of becoming a football player. He is after football day and night."

Two parents of abducted children have died, one of a heart attack, said the bishop of Kontagora diocese, Rev. Bulus Dauwa Yohanna, who also runs the school.

A spokesperson for Nigeria's presidency, Bayo Onanuga, did not directly address parents' allegations of being left in the dark. Onanuga told the AP on Wednesday that the military is mounting pressure on the gunmen to release the children.

Nigerian authorities have said helicopters and ground troops have been deployed. Military personnel mingled with anxious parents this week.

The attack came days after gunmen seized 25 students in nearby Kebbi state. All have been rescued, Nigerian authorities said on Tuesday. On Wednesday, police said the students had been reunited with their families.

AnAP tallyshows that at least 1,799 students have been abducted in a dozen of the largest attacks in Nigeria starting with the seizure of 276 schoolgirls in the village of Chibok by Boko Haram militants, an attack that sparked global outrage.

Some students escape. Others are rescued. Some are never seen again.

Some abducted students have health issues

When Yohanna Yakubu, a church pastor, heard his daughter Mercy was among the 12 teachers also taken in the Papiri attack, he ran to the school. Other agonized parents were already there.

"I went straight to her room (at the dormitory) and saw that the window was broken," Yakubu said. He called the lack of information from authorities frustrating.

These days he sits in silence, worry creasing his face.

Danteni Mathew's three children were abducted, but one escaped. He worries about the health of his youngest, who remains missing.

"Yahaya was not healthy before his abduction from the school as he is still battling with hepatitis C," Mathew said.

School safety training had been promised

Under international scrutiny after the Chibok mass abduction, Nigeria's government initiated a Safe School Initiative with plans to involve military assets and train staff to improve safety at schools. Soldiers in some cases are stationed at schools considered vulnerable.

It was not immediately clear whether the Papiri school had received that training.

Activists and others assert that little has been done.

UNICEF last year said just 37% of schools across 10 states in Nigeria's volatile north have early-warning systems to detect threats.

"The fact is that Nigerian lives do not matter to the Nigerian government, and what matters to the Nigerian government is how good they look, so they are more focused on propaganda," said Aisha Yesufu, who helped found the Bring Back Our Girls movement after the Chibok abduction.

Analysts say armed gangs are spreading

Analysts say armed gangs often target schools for abductions because of the pressure they put on the government to negotiate ransoms.

The West African nation is battling dozens of armed groups operating in remote communities with limited government and security presence.

The crisis has become more complex as groups from other parts of the vast Sahel region have joined Boko Haram factions in trying to establish their presence in northern Nigeria, said James Barnett, a research fellow with the U.S.-based Hudson Institute.

"Both bandits and jihadists can have similar interests in conducting these sorts of mass abductions," he said.

Adetayo reported from Lagos, Nigeria.

Nigerian parents say they are kept in the dark over abducted schoolchildren

PAPIRI, Nigeria (AP) — Several parents of the over 300 schoolchildren seized by armed men in thelatest mass abduction in ...
Frustrated by missing mail, one American took the Postal Service to court

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — As a general rule, it's difficult to sue theU.S. Postal Servicefor lost, delayed or mishandled mail.

But a case before the U.S. Supreme Court involving aTexaslandlord who alleges her mail was deliberately withheld for two years is looking to challenge that, in a proceeding the cash-strappedPostal Servicesays could prompt a deluge of lawsuits over the very common, if frustrating, phenomenon of missing mail. That concern takes on particular resonance during the holiday season, when the volume of mail — billions of sentimental items from Christmas cards to Black Friday purchases — ramps up.

The case focuses on whether the special postal exemption to the Federal Tort Claims Act applies when postal employees intentionally fail to deliver letters and packages.

"We're going to be faced with, I think, a ton of suits about mail," Frederick Liu, assistant to the Solicitor General for the Department of Justice, warned the justices during oral arguments last month. He predicted that if the landlord wins the case, people will infer their mail didn't arrive "because of a rude comment that they heard, or what have you."

The federal tort law allows a private individual to sue the federal government for monetary damages if a federal employee hurts them or damages their property by acting negligently.

But Congress created multiple exceptions to the law, including one for the Postal Service, shielding it from lawsuits over missing or late mail. The exception says the post office can't be sued for "loss, miscarriage or negligent transmission of letters or postal matter." Definitions of those words have become the crux of the case before the Supreme Court.

Last month, some justices appeared to question the government's claim that USPS is shielded from such lawsuits. But concern was expressed about opening the doors to frivolous litigation. Justice Samuel Alito suggested people might believe carriers intentionally didn't deliver mail because they didn't receive a tip at Christmas or they were scared by a "big dog that ran up to the door."

"What will the consequences be if all these suits are filed and they have to be litigated?" Alito asked. "Is the cost of a first-class letter going to be $3 now?"

A two-year battle over missing mail

Easha Anand, a lawyer for the landlord, has accused the government of "fearmongering about endless litigation." She argued it's unusual for someone to experience the level of mistreatment Lebene Konan did and contends the USPS would still retain immunity for most postal matter-related harms even if the court rules in the landlord's favor.

"These sorts of allegations, I think, will be rare," she said in court.

Konan, a landlord, real estate agent and insurance agent, claims two employees at a post office in Euless, Texas, part of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, deliberately didn't deliver mail belonging to her and her tenants because she alleges they didn't like that she is Black and owns multiple properties.

According to court documents, the dispute began when Konan discovered the mailbox key for one of her rental properties had been changed without her knowledge, preventing her from collecting and distributing tenants' mail from the box. When she contacted the local post office, she was told she wouldn't receive a new key or regular delivery until she proved she owned the property. She did so, the documents say, but the mail problems continued, despite the USPS Inspector General instructing the mail to be delivered.

Konan alleges the employees marked some of the mail as undeliverable or return to sender. Konan and her tenants failed to receive important mail such as bills, medications and car titles, according to the lawsuit. Konan also claims she lost rental income because some tenants moved out due to the situation.

After filing dozens of complaints with postal officials, Konan finally filed a lawsuit under the 1946 Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), which has now made its way to the nation's highest court. A decision in the case is expected to be issued next year.

Konan, reached by email, declined to comment while the case was still pending, on advice of her lawyer.

Does the postal exemption apply or not?

While a federal district court in Texas dismissed Konan's FTCA claims, arguing they fell under the postal exemption, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed part of that decision last year.

The judges disagreed with the lower court's determination that Konan's claims were precluded because they arose out of a "loss" or a "miscarriage." Rather, the judges said Konan's case doesn't fall into one of those "limited situations" because it involved the intentional act of not delivering the mail.

"Because the conduct alleged in this case does not fall squarely within the exceptions for 'loss, miscarriage, or negligent transmission,' sovereign immunity does not bar Konan's FTCA claims," the judges wrote.

The appellate court sided with the lower court's decision to dismiss Konan's separate claim against the individual postal workers.

The USPS, which declined to comment, appealed the case to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Kevin Kosar, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a public policy think tank, who studies postal matters, said he believes it's incorrect for the government to argue the postal exemption covers the intentional failure to deliver mail.

Kosar said he also doubts there will be a deluge of lawsuits if the court rules narrowly in the case, questioning whether aggrieved postal customers could even find an attorney willing to sue the USPS.

He asked: "What lawyer, for example, wants to file a suit and spends years in the courts because someone spent 78 cents on a first-class stamp and their letter got lost?"

Frustrated by missing mail, one American took the Postal Service to court

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — As a general rule, it's difficult to sue theU.S. Postal Servicefor lost, delayed or mishandled...
Israeli forensic examiners have identified the remains of a deceased Israeli hostage returned from Gaza as those of Dror Or, the prime minister's office said on November 26, 2025. - The Hostages Families Forum

Israeli forensic examiners have identified the remains of a deceased Israeli hostage returned from Gaza as those of Dror Or, the prime minister's office said on Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, Hamas transferred the remains to Israel through the Red Cross. The handover leaves two deceased hostages – an Israeli and a Thai national – still in Gaza from Hamas' October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel.

Israel and Hamas reached a ceasefire agreement in October, ending two years of war that killed more than 69,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza health ministry, and reduced much of the enclave to rubble.

As part of the deal, Hamas agreed to release the remainder of the 251 hostages – dead and alive – that it kidnapped on October 7. The last 20 living hostages were released in mid-October.

Or, 48, was killed in Kibbutz Be'eri during the attacks. He was initially believed to have been abducted, but in May 2024 his family was informed that he had been killed in the attack alongside his wife, Yonat. His body was taken to Gaza.

The parents left behind three children, two of whom were also abducted and taken into Gaza but were released in November 2023.

In Hebrew, Dror means "freedom" and Or means "light." Or's family said his name described him perfectly: "a free spirit spreading strong light around the world," according to the Hostages and Missing Families Forum.

Or was described by the forum as a devoted father. He was the chief cheesemaker at the Be'eri dairy, and a yoga teacher.

The release of his remains comes after a series of such transfers in recent weeks as Hamas has handed over the deceased hostages still in Gaza.

Israeli intelligence has assessedthat Hamas may not be able to find and return all the remaining dead hostages in Gaza. But Hamas has continued to search for remains in different parts of the enclave.

The Hostages and Missing Families Forum has continued to organize rallies in Tel Aviv and elsewhere across Israel calling for the release of the remaining deceased hostages.

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