 Following the release of 14 students of Grinfield University over the weekend, security experts have urged the government to take charge of the rising security challenges in the country and not leave the victims and their families to their fate. Plus, South Africa's Ongozika Aichesi tells us more. After four days in the hands of their captors, the students reunite with family and friends. However, their parents have cried out over millions of naira, including motorcycles paid as ransom without support from the government. In their words, the government has failed them. To be released, we are not happy to tell the government of Nigeria that we are not happy. Reacting to this development, some security experts in the government should take responsibility for the security issues in the country and not show weakness. They are quick to demand adequate compensation for the parents of the adopted students because they've gone through a lot to provide the ransom, including untold trauma without the government's help. Then deal with the situation decisively. I have been saying and I have been arguing all the criminals that are operating in northern Nigeria, especially in the north west, all these bandits are known, all these bandits, all their locations are known, so the government should sit to its responsibility and take a decisive measure to deal with the situation. So if you're a government and you're unable to provide security and people are kidnapped and you say you're unable to negotiate, what does that mean? Do you want them to be killed? So the parents who have to sell all they have to security, they have been changed, they have been very deadly blow. So I really, I think to me the government must find a way to compensate them. Governor Nassiu Erufai has assured the released students that the bitterness of the last few weeks is now over, as he will set the backdrop for positive achievements in their lives. For Plus TV Africa, go Zika or HSE.