Boko Haram has released a six-minute-and-30-second footage showing that it has custody of the students abducted from a government secondary school in Kankara, Katsina State.
In the video, tens of young boys could be seen, all covered in dust and appearing to be within a forest area.
A relatively old schoolboy who spoke urged the Nigerian Government to settle amicably with their abductors and advised against the use of military force in rescuing them.
“Please, you have to dissolve any gang of vigilantes, close any kind of schools, excluding Islamiyyah [Qur’anic schools]. All the troops who have come here to help us, please send them back,” one of the abducted schoolboys pleaded in the released video.
Katsina state authorities reported approximately 320 remained missing on Tuesday, the same day the Islamist extremist group claimed responsibility for their abduction.
Katsina’s governor, Aminu Bello Masari, said 839 boys were enrolled at the school, but it is not clear how many students were at the school at the time of the raid, nor how many eluded the kidnappers.
On Monday, the state governor said the abductors “have made contacts with the government”.
“Talks are ongoing to ensure their safety and return to their respective families,” he said on Twitter.
Also, a joint rescue operation was launched by the Nigerian police, air force, and army, according to the government. The army said on Monday it had located the hideout of the men, and that a military operation was underway.