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Conflicting claims have emerged over the identity of those responsible for the abduction of retired Major General Rabe Abubakar Batsari and his wife in Katsina State, with sources in the Matazu and Batsari axis casting doubt on early suggestions linking the attack to a notorious bandit leader.

The couple were kidnapped on Saturday after gunmen ambushed their vehicle along the Marabar Musawa–Kafinsoli road near Zakin Baure village, wounding their driver before dragging them into a nearby forest.

Initial intelligence pointed to Muhammadu Fulani, a figure long associated with violent operations in parts of Katsina, particularly around Kuki and Sayaya, as the likely organiser. But sources familiar with the security dynamics of the area say the attack bears little resemblance to his established methods.

Residents describe Muhammadu Fulani as a commander who favours large-scale, high-visibility assaults intended to maximise fear and attention. The ambush on the retired general’s convoy, by contrast, appeared limited in scope and appeared to target the vehicle with little sign of prior planning.

“This does not look like his style,” one local source said. “His operations are usually massive and coordinated. This one involved a small group targeting a single vehicle.”

Doubts are reinforced by reports of a significant reduction in the bandit leader’s activities following a security operation earlier this year in which several of his fighters were killed and dozens of kidnap victims freed, a development believed to have badly disrupted his operational network.

Adding to the uncertainty is the possibility that the attackers had no idea who they were abducting. Sources say the gunmen appeared to act as opportunistic criminals rather than a group executing a targeted strike on a high-value individual.

“From what we gathered, they did not even realise they had abducted a retired general,” a Sayaya village resident said. “If they knew, the operation would likely have been very different.”

Security analysts say the incident reflects the increasingly fragmented nature of armed criminality across Katsina and the broader North-West, where smaller and less structured gangs now operate alongside — and sometimes independently of — established bandit networks.

Security agencies have not confirmed who is responsible for the abduction. Search-and-rescue operations for the couple are ongoing.

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