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Honduras presidential election marred by fraud accusations as polls open | Elections News

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The vote is taking place in a highly polarised climate, with the US backing the right-wing candidate Nasry Asfura.

Hondurans are heading to the polls to elect a new president in a tightly contested race that is taking place amid concerns over voter fraud in the impoverished Central American country.

Polls opened on Sunday at 7am local time (13:00 GMT) for 10 hours of voting, with the first results expected late Sunday night.

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Most polls show a virtual tie between three of the five contenders: former Defence Minister Rixi Moncada of the governing leftist Liberty and Refoundation (LIBRE) party; former Tegucigalpa Mayor Nasry Asfura of the right-wing National Party; and television host Salvador Nasralla of the centrist Liberal Party.

The elections, in which the 128 members of Congress, hundreds of mayors, and thousands of other public officials will also be chosen, are taking place in a highly polarised climate, with the three top candidates accusing each other of plotting fraud. Moncada has suggested that she will not recognise the official results.

Incumbent President Xiomara Castro of the LIBRE party is limited by law to one term in office.

Honduras’s Attorney General’s Office, aligned with the ruling party, has accused the opposition parties of planning to commit voter fraud, a claim they deny.

Prosecutors have opened an investigation into audio recordings that allegedly show a high-ranking National Party politician discussing plans with an unidentified military officer to influence the election.

The alleged recordings, which the National Party says were created using artificial intelligence, have become central to Moncada’s campaign.

Public distrust

Political tensions have contributed to a growing public distrust of the electoral authorities and the electoral process in general. There have also been delays in the provision of voting materials.

“We are hoping that there will be no fraud and that the elections will be peaceful,” said Jennifer Lopez, a 22-year-old law student in Tegucigalpa. “This would be a huge step forward for democracy in our country.”

Amid the heated atmosphere, 6.5 million Hondurans will decide between continuing with Castro’s left-wing social and economic agenda or shifting towards a conservative agenda by supporting the Liberal or National parties.

Castro, the first woman to govern Honduras, has increased public investment and social spending. The economy has grown moderately, and poverty and inequality have decreased, although both remain high. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has praised her government’s prudent fiscal management.

The country’s homicide rate has also fallen to its lowest level in recent history, but violence persists.

US stance

The Organization of American States has expressed concerns about the electoral process, and the majority of its members in an extraordinary session this week called for the government to conduct elections free of intimidation, fraud and political interference.

US Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau also warned on X that the United States will respond “swiftly and decisively to anyone who undermines the integrity of the democratic process in Honduras”.

US President Donald Trump has backed Asfura, posting on social media that “if he doesn’t win, the United States will not be throwing good money after bad”.

Honduras, where six out of every 10 citizens live in poverty, experienced a coup in 2009 when an alliance of right-wing military figures, politicians and businessmen overthrew Manuel Zelaya, the husband of the current president.

In 2021, Honduran voters gave Castro a landslide victory, ending decades of rule by the National and Liberal parties.

Netanyahu of Israel Requests Pardon in Ongoing Corruption Trial

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Israel's Netanyahu seeks pardon in years-long corruption trial

Four people die during a family gathering in California

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At least four people have been killed in a mass shooting at a family gathering in California, authorities say.

Ten others were injured in the shooting on Saturday evening at a restaurant in the state’s northern city of Stockton.

Local police say the victims include both adults and children. The conditions of the injured have not been confirmed.

A suspect is still on the loose and police say they believe the shooting may have been “targeted”.

The city’s deputy mayor earlier said the shooting had occurred “at a children’s birthday party”. Police have not confirmed the type of event at which the shooting occurred, beyond it being a family gathering.

“[A] birthday party should never be a place where families fear for their lives,” Deputy Mayor Jason Lee wrote on social media.

The San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office said the shooting happened shortly before 18:00 local time (02:00 GMT on Sunday), and is appealing to anyone with “information, video footage, or who may have witnessed any part of the incident” to come forward.

Spokeswoman Heather Brent described the incident as “unfathomable”, adding: “This is a very active and ongoing investigation, and information remains limited.

“Early indications suggest this may be a targeted incident, and investigators are exploring all possibilities.”

Stockton’s Mayor Christina Fugazi called the shooting “unacceptable”.

“Families should be together instead of at the hospital, standing next to their loved one, praying that they survive.”

California has some of the strictest firearm laws in the US, and has in recent years faced challenges to it.

In 2021, a federal judge overturned the state’s ban on assault weapons, such as the AR-15 rifle.

The following year, the US Supreme Court expanded gun rights as it struck down a New York law restricting gun-carrying rights, jeopardising similar regulation in California.

”Families should be together instead of at the hospital”, says Stockton’s mayor

Harvard Professor Stresses the Importance of Workplace Happiness for Leaders in Influencing Stock Prices

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Your boss’s mood and behavior can affect how everyone else around them performs at work. But the happier your boss is, the happier their employees are—and that tends to have a positive impact on both the company’s bottom line, and its market performance.

That’s the conclusion from Arthur C. Brooks, a Harvard professor who teaches courses on leadership and happiness at both the Harvard Kennedy School and Harvard Business School. Speaking recently at Harvard Business School’s Klarman Hall for an episode of the HBR IdeaCast, Brooks said “happier employees are more profitable, more productive employees. That’s just the way it is. If you can have a happier workforce, you’re going to have a better company. And the results are going to be there.”

Brooks, a bestselling author whose recent book Build the Life You Want was co-written with Oprah Winfrey, said leaders who know how to prioritize their happiness will learn it “really, really is a good investment.”

The business case for happiness at work

Research from Irrational Capital, a Wall Street investment firm Brooks has advised, shows a clear financial correlation between employee happiness and company performance. The firm analyzed data from 7,500 publicly traded companies, including the entire S&P 500 and Russell 1000.​

“What they find is, for example, if you’re in the top 20% of workplace well-being, you will be, on average, about 520 basis points above the S&P 500 in your stock price over the past year,” Brooks said. “This stuff is really performing. It really, really is a good investment.”​

Separate research from the University of Oxford has reinforced this connection, finding that a one-point increase in employee happiness scores correlated with billions of dollars in additional annual profits.​

What workers want

The problem, Brooks argued, is that companies often misunderstand what makes employees happy. When Silicon Valley firms ask workers what would improve their satisfaction, “the employees don’t know. They just know they’re not happy. And so they’ll say stuff like, I don’t know, a ping pong table. How about avocado toast?”

​Brooks attributed this gap between what companies offer and what employees need to a deeper issue: leadership disconnection. When a boss is stressed, isolated, or unhappy—conditions he noted are nearly universal for new CEOs—they struggle to create the psychological safety and attentiveness that employees crave.

“The number one predictor of somebody hating their job is a bad boss,” Brooks said. “And it has a lot to do with the character, personality, and leadership style of the boss. If you’re the boss, you can ruin the workplace very, very quickly.”

This influence operates through what psychologists call emotional contagion, meaning an employee’s satisfaction and engagement are directly shaped by their manager’s emotional state and presence. A leader working on their own well-being is better equipped to listen, empower their team, and create the conditions where genuine workplace relationships flourish.

According to Brooks, employees want four specific things: genuine friendships at work, feeling empowered and improving at their jobs, management that listens to their suggestions, and efficiency (not having their time wasted in unnecessary meetings).​

The leadership trap

It’s natural to want to climb the corporate ladder—to seek challenge, and all the various perks that come with greater responsibility. But Brooks said the top two emotions CEOs experience during their first 24 months on the job aren’t joy or contentment. Instead, they’re loneliness and anger.

This aligns with broader research showing that roughly half of CEOs report feelings of isolation, with 70% of first-time executives saying loneliness negatively affects their performance.​

“A lot of them are really caught by surprise because once again, your ancient limbic system says, climb, man, the brass ring,” Brooks said. “That’s where it’s at. It’s going to be so great. And they get there, and they don’t like it.”​

For Brooks, his main goal is training managers with a specific goal: “to be happy people.”

“That’s the number one predictor of being a good boss is working on your own happiness,” he said.​

He drew a parallel to parenting, dismissing the common advice that parents are “never happier than your unhappiest child” as fundamentally misguided. “That’s just bad parenting, straight up, because nobody wants to have an unhappy mother or father. And nobody wants to have an unhappy boss.”​

“If you’re in any position of leadership, you have an ethical responsibility to be working on your happiness because it’s your gift to the people over whom you’re a steward,” he said.

​You can watch the full talk with Brooks and Harvard Business Review’s Adi Ignatius below.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.

Tomoyuki Matsushita, Olympic medalist, sets new personal record with 1:55.60 in 200 IM at Japan Open.

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By Retta Race on SwimSwam

2025 JAPAN OPEN

The 2025 Japan Open concluded tonight from the Tokyo Aquatics Center but not before Olympic silver medalist Tomoyuki Matsushita ripped a new lifetime best in the men’s 200m IM.

After claiming the 4th seed with a solid morning effort of 1:58.78, 20-year-old Matsushita crushed a monster performance of 1:55.60 to take the gold.

16-year-old World Junior record holder in the 400m IM Yumeki Kojima reaped silver with a time of 1:57.51 and So Ogata rounded out the podium this evening in 1:57.64.

As for Matsushita, his swim hacked well over half a second off his previous best-ever performance of 1:56.35. That slower outing was performed at the Japanese World Championship Trials this past March to check him in as Japan’s 4th-swiftest performer in history.

Tonight, however, splitting 24.64/29.03/34.04/27.89, Matsuhita bumps himself up to now rank 3rd among all-time Japanese men and takes over the #1 spot in the season’s world rankings, dethroning teammate Kosuke Makino.

He is also now the 15th-best performer in history worldwide.

Top 5 Japanese Men’s LCM 200 IM Performers All-Time

  1. Kosuke Hagino – 1:55.07, 2016
  2. Daiya Seto – 1:55.55, 2020
  3. Tomoyuki Matsushita – 1:55.6o, 2025
  4. Kosuke Makino – 1:55.85, 2025
  5. So Ogata – 1:57.06, 2023

2025-2026 LCM Men 200 IM

2 Kosuke
Makino
JPN 1:55.85 09/13
3 Wang
Shun
CHN 1:56.20 11/14
4 So
Ogata
JPN 1:57.28 09/06
5 YUMEKI
KOJIMA
JPN 1:57.51 11/30

View Top 23»

Matsushita’s 1:55.60 performance would have garnered him the bronze at the 2024 Olympic Games and 4th place at this year’s World Championships.

It’s important to note that Kojima’s silver medal-worthy 1:57.51 effort represents a near-lifetime best, falling just shy of the 1:57.32 nabbed at this year’s World Junior Championships. That stands as the fastest mark ever recorded by a 16-year-old.

Matsushita’s 200m IM result comes on the heels of last night’s 4:07.67 stunner at the hands of 19-year-old Asaki Nishikawa in the men’s 400m IM. Nishikawa was indeed in tonight’s 2IM final, posting 1:57.80 for 5th place.

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Olympic Medalist Tomoyuki Matsushita Rips 1:55.60 200 IM At Japan Open

Affordable new electrode sponge recycles battery lithium

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While lithium extraction technologies generally focus on ways to get the essential metal out of the ground, there’s another source to mine: existing batteries that no longer work. A new technique could now make that process economically viable.

When it comes to energy storage in rechargeable batteries, it’s hard to beat lithium. As the lightest metal on the period table, it has an impressive energy density. It also sheds electrons more easily than any other metal, meaning it has the highest electrochemical potential. Additionally, it excels at storing and releasing energy repeatedly. Yet, while lithium is abundant on our planet, mining clean sources of it can be difficult, costly, and environmentally damaging.

So, to find other sources of the material, scientists have been turning to lithium-ion batteries that have reached the end of their lifespan, yet still have perfectly usable amounts of the metal inside. Last year, for example, we heard about a method of using microwaves to free up the lithium inside spent batteries. Still, even though spent batteries are in abundant supply, separating out the lithium from the other materials they contain can also be an expensive proposition.

Enter the new technique from scientists at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. There, a team led by chemical and biomolecular engineering professor Xiao Su, has been spending time disassembling batteries and then submerging them in an organic solvent. This leads to a brine that contains lithium as well as other metals present in the batteries.

To harvest the lithium, the team developed a special electrode created from a copolymer consisting of molecules that attach to lithium and those that respond to an electrical current. When placed inside the brine and electrified, it sucked only lithium from the solution like a sponge, leaving other metals behind.

Not only was the method effective at separating out and recovering lithium, but the electrode was able to maintain its conductivity for over 500 cycles. What’s more, the researchers say the method is much more affordable than other battery-based lithium-harvesting techniques, costing about US$12.70 per kilogram of lithium recovered.

That’s in comparison to acid leaching, which runs about $81-462 per kilogram and produces chemical waste, and high-heat smelting, which costs $36-126 per kilogram and is more inefficient at separating out lithium from other elements. Based on these findings, the team says its method could be the first commercially viable way to recapture lithium from dead batteries.

Indeed, according to Daily Metal Prices, lithium costs $13.17 per kilo on the open market as of the time of writing. So this method actually comes out cheaper than just buying the stuff.

The researchers indicate that their work was designed as a proof-of-concept study and believe more efforts should now be put into scaling and refining their discovery.

“These results help highlight the broad applicability of electrochemical separations for metal recycling, not only in water, but also from organic solvents that are commonly used to leach waste batteries,” concludes Su. “We envision this work helping establish a more circular, sustainable supply chain for lithium, enhancing supply security and potentially reducing the environmental impacts associated with other forms of lithium extraction, such as mining.”

The study has been published in the journal ACS Energy Letters.

Source: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Netanyahu Appeals to Israeli President for Pardon in Corruption Cases

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has requested presidential pardon amid ongoing corruption cases.

The Israeli president’s office on Sunday said Netanyahu submitted a request for pardon to President Isaac Herzog.

Netanyahu is up against three separate cases of corruption filed in 2019, which include allegations of bribery, fraud, and breach of trust. He denies the charges and has pleaded not guilty.

“The Office of the President is aware that this is an extraordinary request which carries with it significant implications. After receiving all of the relevant opinions, the president will responsibly and sincerely consider the request,” Herzog’s office said in a statement.

Netanyahu’s request comes as US President Donald Trump pushes Herzog to pardon Netanyahu in the cases in question. Herzog also received a letter from Trump earlier in November, urging him to consider the pardon.

During Trump’s visit to Israel in October, he had also urged Herzog to pardon Netanyahu in an address to the Israeli parliament.

The Israeli prime minister is also wanted by The Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC). In November 2024, the ICC issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

Netanyahu is the only sitting prime minister in Israeli history to stand trial, after being charged with fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in three separate cases accusing him of exchanging favors with wealthy political supporters.

The graft cases against him include allegations of receiving nearly 700,000 shekels ($211,832) in gifts from businessmen.

Despite the largely ceremonial role of the Israeli presidency, Herzog has the authority to pardon convicted criminals under unusual circumstances.

However, Netanyahu’s trial, which began in 2020, has yet to be concluded.

In a videotaped statement, Netanyahu said the trial has divided the country and that a pardon would help restore national unity. He also said the requirement that he appear in court three times a week is a distraction that makes it difficult for him to lead the country.

Netanyahu’s request consisted of two documents – a detailed letter signed by his lawyer and a letter signed by Netanyahu. They will be sent to the justice ministry for opinions and will then be transferred to the Legal Advisor in the Office of the President, which will formulate additional opinions for the president.

Wasserman Music grows its UK presence with new hires in Touring, Artist Services, and Representation divisions

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Talent agency Wasserman Music has expanded its UK operation with a series of new hires across tour marketing, artist services and artist representation, as the agency continues to build out its global footprint.

The company has appointed Paul Ryan as Senior Vice President and Agent. A veteran of the rock and metal sector, Ryan brings decades of experience across artist management, promotion and agency leadership.

He will continue to represent Architects, Bring Me The Horizon, Cradle Of Filth, Lamb Of God, Malevolence and Sleep Token, alongside newly signed acts TesseracT and Currents.

Wasserman has also hired Chris Lander as Vice President within its artist services division, expanding the team’s work in podcasts and broader non-touring opportunities. Lander has held senior roles across talent development and production at Global Media, contributing to major UK podcast properties My Therapist Ghosted Me, LuAnna: The Podcast and Take That: This Life. His previous talent roster includes comedians James Acaster, Nish Kumar and Deborah Frances-White.

“Each brings a unique skill set that strengthens our presence in the UK and broadens the opportunities we can deliver for our artists. Their passion, experience, and vision will be invaluable as we continue to grow.” 

Alex Hardee, EVP & Managing Executive, Wasserman Music.

Meanwhile, Rebecca Laurie joins as Manager on the Tour Marketing team. She will oversee domestic and global tour marketing for UK agents. Laurie previously worked in management at UROK (supporting Tom Odell and Mystery Jets), in partnerships at DICE, and spent five years in festival and tour marketing at AEG.

Wasserman has also confirmed the internal promotion of Laura Flynn, who was elevated to Manager, Tour Marketing in September. Flynn has worked on recent tour campaigns for RAYE, Louis Tomlinson, D-Block Europe and The Neighbourhood.

Before moving into tour marketing, she was Senior Coordinator under agent Rob Challice, supporting artists including Bon Iver, Kings of Convenience, Beirut, Novo Amor and The Mary Wallopers.

“We’re thrilled to welcome Paul, Chris, and Rebecca to our team, and to have Laura join our tour marketing division,” said Alex Hardee, EVP & Managing Executive, Wasserman Music.

“Each brings a unique skill set that strengthens our presence in the UK and broadens the opportunities we can deliver for our artists. Their passion, experience, and vision will be invaluable as we continue to grow.”

The hires arrive during a wider period of expansion for Wasserman. Earlier this year, the agency made a trio of senior appointments across its Artist Services and Communications teams, and elevated Shelley Pisarra to Chief Insights & Innovation Officer.

Wasserman also strengthened its Hip-Hop/R&B division with the additions of Jazmyn Griffin and Tessie Lammle, while promoting Kevin Shivers, James Rubin and Cristina Baxter into leadership roles.Music Business Worldwide

Fear silences victims of Nigeria’s kidnapping crisis

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Mayeni Jonesand

Kyla Herrmannsen,in Minna, Nigeria

EPA/Shutterstock A cropped image showing clasped hands of a parent holding a mobile phone as they wait outside St Mary's Catholic School in Papiri, Niger State - 24 November 2025.EPA/Shutterstock

Parents have been waiting outside the school in Papiri desperate for news

Many of the parents whose children were abducted 10 days ago from a boarding school in Nigeria are terrified – they do not want to talk to the authorities or journalists in case of reprisals from the kidnappers.

“If they hear you say anything about them, before you know it they’ll come for you. They’ll come to your house and take you into the bush,” one of them told the BBC. For his safety, the BBC is not identifying him and is calling him Aliyu.

His young son is one of more 300 students abducted when armed men stormed the grounds of St Mary’s Catholic School in Papiri village in the central state of Niger in the early hours of 21 November.

Some of the children taken are as young as five years old. About 250 are still reportedly missing, though state officials have said this number is exaggerated.

The incident is part of a recent wave of mass abductions in north and central Nigeria – some of which have been blamed on criminal gangs, known locally as “bandits”, who see kidnapping for ransom as a quick and easy way to make money.

“Our village is remote, we are close to the bandits,” explained Aliyu, whose son is still among the missing.

“It’s a three-hour drive to where they hide. We know where they are, but we can’t go there ourselves, it’s too dangerous.”

He is desperate with worry – especially as vulnerable captives kept in forest hideouts have died during previous abductions, whether from sickness or because ransoms have not been paid.

“I feel so bitter and my wife hasn’t eaten for days… We’re not happy at all. We need someone to help us to take action.”

A woman's hand is seen to the left of the image as she looks on at empty black painted bunk beds in a dormitory at the school in Papiri - November 2025.

Remote boarding schools, like this one in Papiri, are seen as soft targets by groups seeking a large ransom

Two days after the Papiri kidnapping, 12 teenage girls were abducted from Mussa District in the north-eastern Borno state, long the flashphoint of a jihadist insurgency in the region.

The Nigerian army says the girls were seized by the Islamic State of West Africa (Iswap) group while harvesting crops on their family farmlands, and were subsequently rescued following an “intelligence-led” operation.

And a few days before the Papiri kidnapping, 25 girls were taken from their school in Maga, which is 200km (125 miles) further north in Kebbi state.

One of the students escaped before the rest were rescued by the security forces last week from what the authorities said was a “farm settlement”.

Bandits tend to live in cattle camps deep in the bush. The gangs are largely composed of ethnic Fulani people, who are traditionally nomadic herders.

No details have been released about whether a ransom was paid to free the girls from Maga.

In fact, it is illegal to pay ransoms in Nigeria. However, if they are not paid hostages can be – and have been – killed.

Relatives tend to crowdfund or in the case of mass school abductions, the authorities are sometimes suspected of negotiating for their release.

No group has said it was behind these two recent school kidnappings, though the government has recently told the BBC it believes it was jihadists, not bandits, who are responsible. Locals in Kebbi and Niger states are likely to be curious for more information on this.

Yusuf, the legal guardian to some of the Maga girls and whose name has also been changed to protect his identity, believes such kidnappings could not have happened without informants in the community.

“All these abductions are not common in Kebbi. These kidnappings can only happen with the connivance of someone from the community, because no stranger can come to a place and pull something like this off without the help of locals,” he told the BBC.

“They need the help of someone who knows the terrain very well.”

But there has been a surprising change of approach in some areas where villages have been at the mercy of bandits for the last decade and have given up hope of getting help from the security forces.

It has led some of these rural communities, who live in close proximity to the kidnapping gangs and in the woeful absence of effective policing, to come up with their own solutions.

“In the north-west, those communities that have been severely affected by these mass kidnappings have struck so-called peace deals with these bandits in exchange for access to mines,” David Nwaugwe, a security analyst for security risk consulting firm SBM Intelligence, told the BBC.

Many states in the north-west are rich in untapped mineral deposits – especially gold, a profitable prospect for bandit gangs.

These deals, according to Mr Nwaugwe, have been effective in some areas.

“What we’ve seen over time is that there seems to be some sort of a decline in the rate of attacks,” he said.

Katsina state, in Nigeria’s far north, is a case in point. It has long been synonymous with insecurity – particularly banditry and mass kidnappings. But in the past year, things have begun to shift, thanks in part to several peace deals struck between bandit leaders and community leaders.

Sitting on mats under the shade of wide trees, representatives from both sides hash out their terms and conditions before eventually coming to an agreement.

Bandit leaders have been willing to negotiate, though have faced criticism for attending peace talks armed with AK47 guns and other weapons.

The area of Jibia was an early adopter of the peace negotiation process, reaching a deal in March this year.

After enduring more than 10 years of insecurity, life had become untenable, said community leader and lawyer Ibrahim Sabiu, who represented Jibia during the peace talks.

“Our homes and sources of livelihood were destroyed,” he told the BBC in September.

“Schools and hospitals all closed down. Hundreds of people were killed and hundreds more kidnapped for ransom.”

A main stipulation of the peace deal was that the schools re-open. In addition, the community requested a guarantee that they would not be attacked and that bandits would not enter the community with guns.

As for the bandits in Jibia, they requested access to clean drinking water and safe passage for their cattle as they moved to new grazing pastures.

They also requested that their women be allowed to buy and trade in local markets.

AFP/Getty Images A Fulani man in silhouette in northern Nigeria tending cattle with long horns.AFP/Getty Images

Cows are prized possessions for ethnic Fulanis, who walk for hundreds of miles to find pasture for them

High on the agenda – for both sides – was the release of those kidnapped. The BBC does not know how many people were released in Jibia, but 37 villagers had been freed in Kurfi, another area of Katsina state, by late September – a month after a deal was struck.

“We had to accept the peace offer because there was no end in sight to the violence,” said Mr Sabiu.

“This is a crisis that the police should handle but the security agencies were brought in and yet, they couldn’t end it.”

Audu Abdullahi Ofisa, a bandit leader who took part in the Jibia talks, endorsed the move towards peace: “Life is full of ups and downs, we are happy to go into another phase.”

Rural communities stand to gain from a return to peace, but what is less immediately obvious is why bandits have entered into peace processes – especially in cases where gold mines were not part of the deals.

Access to ransom money has traditionally made banditry a lucrative endeavour, yet in Kurfi, it was bandit leaders who requested peace talks.

They live relatively nomadic lives, which makes access to clean drinking water difficult. It also drives up the prices of food because they are not able to access markets.

Life had become expensive and uncomfortable.

“We are all tired of violence,” Nasiru Bosho, one of the bandit leaders who took part in the Kurfi peace negotiations, told the BBC.

“We were all living together in the same community until the unfortunate violence began. We have agreed to live and let live. No more harassment or kidnapping by either side.”

There is also a view that such communities have been bled dry and can no longer come up with ransom payments.

While peace deals in the north like those struck in Kurfi and Jibia have yielded tentative security gains, analysts say that this has only shifted insecurity.

Some gangs may find it more rewarding to set their sights on regions further south.

“As you move further south, people are better off economically,” said Mr Nwaugwe.

“The more these gangs push southwards, the more they’re likely to find places that they can attack. Parents in those schools are more able to gather enough funds to pay ransoms.

“In a lot of the north-west whole rural communities have been vacated. Anybody that has the means, has left the rural areas to run towards the major city centres.”

Some have questioned whether the resurgence in attacks in the last few weeks is linked to Donald Trump’s recent threats of military intervention in Nigeria.

The US president criticised the Nigerian government for failing to adequately protect Christians from attacks by Islamist insurgents.

A jihadist insurgency erupted in the north-east of the country in 2009 – and the kidnapping of more than 200 girls by Boko Haram militants from Chibok 11 years ago was one of the first mass abductions.

The government and security analysts have been at pains to point out that both Muslims and Christians have been targets in mass kidnappings. For example, the BBC was told the schoolgirls recently abducted from Maga were Muslim.

“Nigeria’s security situation is now very complicated. We don’t know how to draw the lines between violent extremist groups or bandits. Because they operate almost in the same areas and in a fluid manner,” Christian Ani, from the Institute for Security Studies, told the BBC.

He is not convinced there is a resurgence of high-profile mass kidnapping of schoolchildren because of Trump’s comments.

“They might have ideological motives but they’re more motivated by profit,” he said.

David Nwaugwe agrees one cannot make a causal link between Trump’s comments and the recent uptick in attacks.

“For now, I just think they’re just going after soft targets like schools because they’re easy to get money from. It’s too early to draw other conclusions,” he said.

As far as he is concerned, stopping the violence will require a two-pronged approach – a combination of armed confrontation and negotiating amnesty deals.

“It’s kind of like the stick and carrot approach – show them that you can use overwhelming military force against them, then try to convince the rest to surrender,” he said.

“I don’t think purely using military power is going to work here, you need to complement that with other measures.”

But for the parents of Papiri, the prospect of living peacefully with the enemy remains a far-off dream as they pray for their children’s safe return.

Additional reporting by the BBC’s Chris Ewokor in Abuja

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Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

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