No fewer than 16 residents, including the wife of a local vigilante commander, her younger sister, and four children belonging to a pastor, have been abducted by gunmen during an attack on Peze community in the Byazhi area of Kubwa, within the Bwari Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.
Residents said the heavily armed attackers stormed the community on Tuesday night, operating between about 9:30 p.m. and 10 p.m., as they moved from house to house attempting to force their way into homes.
One resident said the gunmen had earlier assembled in an uncompleted building opposite his house before launching the operation.
“They actually came to my house on Tuesday. One of my neighbours was watching them from the window. They had gathered in an uncompleted building opposite my house, so they didn’t know someone was observing them,” the resident said.
“They started banging on my door and moving around the house, shouting to see if anyone would react. The way they operate is that once you respond, they break the window to gain entry.”
According to the resident, the attackers threatened to kill occupants who refused to open their doors.
“They will tell you that if you don’t open the door, they will break in through the window and kill everyone inside,” he said.
The source explained that when the kidnappers failed to gain entry into his house, they moved to other homes where they eventually abducted several residents.
“In total, they kidnapped 16 people,” he added.
Among the victims were four children belonging to a pastor in the community. The resident said the pastor was not at home when the attackers struck.
“When I later went to the pastor’s house, he told me he had stepped out briefly. Before he could return, people started informing him that kidnappers were operating in the area. When he rushed back home, he discovered that four of his children had been taken, leaving only the youngest child behind,” the source said.
The attack also affected the family of a vigilante commander who had been assisting the community in resisting kidnappers.
According to the resident, the commander had just left his house around 10 p.m. when a neighbour called to alert him that armed men had invaded the area.
“He had just left his house when his neighbour called him and said the attackers had entered one of the houses nearby,” the resident said.
He explained that the commander rushed to the location mentioned by the neighbour, unaware that the gunmen had already surrounded his own residence.
“He ran to the place they mentioned, not knowing they had already surrounded his house,” the source said.
The attackers reportedly blocked the vigilante commander on the road when he attempted to return home and opened fire.
The gunmen later stormed his house, abducting his wife and her younger sister, who had reportedly come to visit the family three days earlier.
Residents said the woman had given birth less than 40 days earlier, and the kidnappers left the newborn baby behind.
“They even ate the food she had been cooking before abducting her,” the source added.
Security operatives later arrived at the scene, but the attackers had already fled with the victims. Residents said the abductors have since contacted the families to demand ransom.
Community members said the area has experienced several kidnapping incidents in recent weeks, including an earlier abduction on January 4 that prompted residents to organise vigilante patrols.
They have called on security agencies and authorities in the Federal Capital Territory to urgently deploy more personnel to the area and take decisive action to curb the growing wave of kidnappings.
As of the time of filing this report, attempts to reach Josephine Adeh, spokesperson of the Nigeria Police Force in the FCT, were unsuccessful.











