FACT CHECK: Reported school attack, student abduction in Kautikari, Borno false, says Makama

Borno State map

The recent reports of a school attack where students were abducted in the Kautikari community in Borno State are totally false.

This is according to security consultant and counter-insurgency expert, Zagazola Makama, who issued a clarification on Sunday.

“A wave of alarming reports circulating across social media and some online platforms has claimed that Boko Haram insurgents attacked a school and abducted students in Kautikari community of Chibok Local Government Area, Borno State,” Makama wrote on his official X account.

The claims, he said, were predictably amplified by emotionally charged references to the 2014 Chibok schoolgirls’ abduction, and have generated anxiety among Nigerians following developments in the troubled region.

However, a detailed fact-check by Makama, based on assessment from field sources, and video evidence from the scene, has found the claims to be entirely false.

Quoting some sources, Makama said the incident occurred at about 7:30 p.m. on June 13, 2026, when ISWAP terrorists launched an attack on a hunters’ patrol base located within the premises of a disused primary school in Kautikari.

What Really Happened During the ISWAP Raid

According to Makama, “the facility being used by the hunters was not functioning as a school at the time of the attack, nor were students present at the location.”

Rather, he explained that local hunters had established a patrol outpost within the structure, using some of the classrooms as temporary accommodation and operational shelters while supporting troops of Operation HADIN KAI’s efforts in the area.

The security consultant added that the terrorists specifically targeted the hunters’ base and not a school populated by students as widely claimed, with initial resistance by the hunters successfully repelling the first assault.

“However, the terrorists later regrouped in larger numbers and launched a second attack, forcing the hunters to temporarily withdraw after running low on ammunition,” Makama stated.

He explained that military sources said reinforcement teams comprising troops of the 117 Task Force Battalion from Kwada, supported by a Quick Response Force, local hunters and vigilante personnel, rapidly mobilised to the scene and engaged the terrorists.

“The coordinated response eventually overwhelmed the attackers and forced them to retreat,” added the counter-insurgency expert.

No Student Was Abducted

Contrary to viral claims, there is no evidence that any student was abducted during the attack, and according to Makama, operational reports from the scene recorded no missing students.

He added that there were no reports of schoolchildren being taken away, and no indication that the terrorists targeted an educational institution in session.

Security sources also confirmed that accountability checks conducted after the attack found no cases of student abduction.

“In fact, the only confirmed casualties were one civilian who was reportedly struck by a stray bullet fired by the terrorists and one member of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) who sustained a gunshot wound to the arm,” Makama stated.

“Sources also said that the terrorists set fire to clothing and personal belongings belonging to the hunters stationed at the outpost. No troops were killed or injured during the engagement.”

Further undermining the false reports is a video footage obtained by Makama from the aftermath of the attack. In the footage, one of the affected hunters is seen showing the damaged facility and burnt belongings while lamenting the destruction caused by the terrorists.

The hunter can be heard explaining that the location served as their place of accommodation and operational base.

“This is where we sleep,” he says while pointing to the affected section of the building.

The footage clearly supports military accounts that the target was a hunters’ outpost and not an occupied school hosting students.

According to Makama, the confusion likely arose because the hunters’ base was situated within the premises of a primary school building.

Photographs and videos showing damaged classrooms were subsequently circulated online without context, leading some platforms to incorrectly conclude that a school had been attacked and students abducted.

The result, Makama lamented, was the rapid spread of misinformation that failed basic verification standards.

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