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was it.
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Abdullahi escaped Friday's mass kidnapping by jumping out of a window.
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E was afraid, terribly afraid.
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But what frightened me the most was that my brother would be in danger.
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When I looked for him, I couldn't see him.
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But in the chaos he lost his twin brother, Mustafa, one of 333 boys, the state governor says, are still unaccounted for.
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Some of them, like Abdullah, he managed to run away, but many are believed to have been taking by armed men for ransom.
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Three days later, the campus is eerily quiet, littered with the reminders of a childhood shuttered just days ago.
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This dormitory still has all of the belongings off some of the young boys who were taken here on Friday nights.
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They were whisked away hastily, barely had the time to take anything with them, and they've left their parents off more questions than answers.
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It's unclear when they will be reunited.
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Rukia Bellows, 14 year old son Omar has asthma was ill in the days before the kidnapping.
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Frankly, I can't sleep whenever I think I'm going to sleep.
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I think about whether he's able to sleep and it keeps me awake, even food.
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I can't eat every day.
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I'm worrying how it is.
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My biggest wish is that he comes back home.
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Kidnapping for ransom has been on the rise in Nigeria with the abductions are not usually on this scale.
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And with hundreds of Children still missing, comparisons are being drawn with the kidnapping of the Chibok girls in 2014, dozens of whom are still missing.
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These parents are hoping that this is not their Children's feet.
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My knee Jones, BBC News conqueror, Household Africa.