No Ransom Paid For Release Of Kidnap Victims —Senate Spokesperson
The Senate spokesman, Yemi Adaramodu, has maintained that the Federal Government paid no ransom to secure the release of the recently kidnapped persons in Kebbi and Niger state.
Adaramodu made this known on Friday during an interview on Channels Television’s The Morning Brief, while reacting to concerns about the lack of visible evidence of confrontation between security operatives and kidnappers during recent rescue operations.
“From our side at the National Assembly, we believe the Federal Government did not pay any ransom to anybody,” he said on the breakfast show.
“If there is any contact with the bandits, there are several types, negative or positive. It can be through force or persuasion.”

The rising frequency of school kidnappings has also intensified debates over the Federal Government’s alleged use of ransom payments, despite repeated denials from officials.
Human rights organisations and community leaders have long argued that opaque rescue operations create room for speculation, especially when victims are released without clear explanations of how they were recovered.
But the senator representing Ekiti South senatorial district believes that negotiations or contact with abductors can take multiple forms, and the public should not expect security agencies to reveal operational details.
He warned against assuming that military engagement did not occur simply because no bodies or images of arrest were presented.
“If you have not seen the corpses of abductors or them being handcuffed from the forest, that does not mean there was no serious exchange of battle,” he stated.
“When abductors realise that superior power is coming, they can abandon their victims and flee.”
According to Adaramodu, the military and other security agencies are not required to provide a public breakdown of their operational strategies.
“The ways and manners of the military, how they rescue victims, cannot and will not be made public,” he said.
“As a security agency, they will not tell us how many bullets they shot or how many guns they lost.”
He emphasised that the priority of both the Senate and the Federal Government is the safe rescue of victims, not the publication of tactical details.
“The job we gave them is to rescue the victims—our girls, our parents, our worshippers,” he said.
“What we know is that they went, they brought back those who were ferried into the forest, and that is what matters.”