Medical Staff Targeted: Plateau Hospital Warns of Abduction Scheme
An internal alert from the Plateau State Specialist Hospital has caused considerable alarm among healthcare professionals.
The hospital’s management disclosed an intelligence report indicating an imminent scheme by armed groups to seize medical personnel, including doctors, nurses, and support staff, particularly within states on the frontline such as Plateau.
The notice, addressed to all department heads, units, and staff, revealed a sinister motive behind these planned abductions.
According to the statement signed by Director of Administration Jina Leah, the terrorists intend to compel captured healthcare providers to treat their members who have sustained injuries, such as gunshot wounds, during confrontations with security forces.
This development, as outlined in the internal communication, represents a strategic change by these groups. Their aim is to maintain operational capability and minimize fatalities among their combatants. The trend presents a severe danger to health workers, particularly those practicing in remote and rural regions where security presence is often scarce.
In response to this grave threat, the hospital management has strongly advised all healthcare staff to improve their personal and professional security measures.
Furthermore, all hospitals and health centers across Plateau State have been instructed to promptly inform their employees about the impending risks, encouraging vigilance and the reporting of any suspicious individuals or activities to security agencies for swift intervention. Authorities also mentioned ongoing efforts by security agencies to avert any negative developments.
This warning from Plateau State health authorities underscores a growing pattern of instability across northern Nigeria.
Armed organizations have increasingly diversified their methods beyond traditional assaults on villages and major roads. For the past decade, the area has endured constant threats from insurgent factions like Boko Haram and various heavily armed bandit groups active in states such as Zamfara, Kaduna, and Niger.
These groups have historically relied on kidnapping for ransom and to assert control, taking advantage of limited security coverage in isolated communities.
Recent analyses indicate an evolution in their tactics, now including the deliberate targeting of professionals like educators, aid workers, and, increasingly, medical staff. The abduction of healthcare workers is viewed as a calculated move to sustain insurgent operations, specifically by ensuring treatment for injured fighters in distant encampments where formal medical services are unavailable.
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