The attack on the train between the capital Abuja and the city of Kaduna last week was a major escalation in violence in northwest Nigeria blamed on heavily armed criminal gangs, known locally as bandits.
The video posted online shows Alwan Ali-Hassan, director of Nigeria’s Bank of Industry, flanked by four armed masked men in military uniform facing the camera, calling on authorities to meet the demands of his captors to secure the release of other hostages who “are in a dire situation.”
AFP could not independently verify the authenticity of the video but family members confirmed Ali-Hassan was released by the gunmen on Wednesday and that it was him in the video.
No specific group has claimed responsibility for the video shot in an undisclosed forest area with an armoured vehicle in the background.
The men do not claim affiliation to a group, but the recording resembles propaganda videos sent by jihadist groups waging a more than 12-year insurrection to establish an Islamic caliphate in Nigeria’s northeast.
The opening prayer in Arabic by one of the masked men is the same as in all the previous propaganda videos released by jihadist groups. The positioning of the gunmen with the hostage is also typical of jihadist videos.
In the video, the speaker said they decided to release the hostage out of compassion as a “Ramadan gesture”, referring to the Muslim holy month of fasting, and his “advanced age”.
Although the speaker claimed no ransom was paid for Ali-Hassan’s release, family sources said they had to pay money to the captors.
Survivors of the March 28 train attack say gunmen opened fire after blowing up the railway.
Witnesses said gunmen broke into the VIP section of the train and herded out a number of passengers.
One week after the train attack, the whereabouts of 168 passengers is still unknown, the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) said, though it is not clear how many may have returned home and not contacted officials.
The Managing Director of the Bank of Agriculture Alwan Ali-Hassan is believed to have been freed.
Northwest and central Nigeria have been terrorised by criminal gangs who raid villages, killing residents and kidnapping for ransom as well as looting homes. But their attacks and abductions have intensified.
Although the gangs who are motivated by financial gains have no ideological leaning, there is concern among local authorities and analysts of growing potential alliances with jihadists.
Nigeria jihadist groups are known to maintain links with the criminal gangs for pragmatic and financial purposes, but is not clear if the train attackers are aligned with any militant group.
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