 Parents of the remaining 20 abducted students of Greenfield University in Kaduna State are peeling to the federal government to urgently rescue their children from bandits. The parents met on Friday for a prayer session in Kaduna, where they decried the abduction of their children since April 20. Chairman of their grouped parents, Marcos Zamai, urged President Buhari to hasten the release of the students before something sinister happened to them. They say the kidnappers are demanding the sum of 100 million Naira, even after the parents have collectively paid them over 60 million Naira as ransom. We that you have seen here are the parents of the Greenfield University student that were kidnapped on the 20th of April 2021. You may recall that this incident happened about 24 days ago. Today is the 24th day and our children are still in the bush. All effort to be able to rescue them has proved abortive. On our own parents, we are passing through here. The general public need to know that as it has been stipulated by the media that they have been released, they have not been released. This is the 24th day they are in captives, harmless with nobody to stand in for them. That is why we feel we should come to the media. We should come and call on the federal government, the state government, well-spirited individuals to call on all private and organization religious leaders to come to our rescue. You can just imagine the pain we are passing through. These children have not done anything wrong. They went there to study, but they were kidnapped. And all effort as parents, we saw all that we own, all that God has given us to be able to rescue them, but to no avail. Our money has been taken by these kidnappers and they refuse to let our children go. And we are calling because this fight is beyond us. We keep begging every day if they call, we beg that they don't have problems with us or they have problems with the federal government. So let the federal government go to talk to them so that they can release their child for us. Look at the rain every day. Look at the sun. It's not as if they are under anywhere. In the bush, no good food, no good air. Each time I talk to my daughter, she says she's sick, that she's very sick, that she wash clothes for them, she cooks for them. It's only God knows what is happening with them right now in the bush. We have mothers there. We have daughters there. We have people, children there. They should please help us. We are very helpless now. They should come to our aid. We don't know what to do anymore. What happened to her? Do you have a plea to the kidnappers? What do you want to tell the kidnappers? Daddy, you... Do you have a plea to the government? What do you want the government to do for you? No, you don't. You know that thing? So tell me how you are referring to them.