ARMED men have kidnapped at least 78 students and their principal from a Presbyterian school in Nkwen village in Cameroon.

The kidnapping on Sunday evening happened near Bamenda, the capital of the troubled English-speaking region, Governor Deben Tchoffo said.

A video purportedly of the kidnapped children has been release on social media via men who call themselves Amba Boys, a reference to the state of Ambazonia that armed separatists are trying to establish in Cameroon’s northwest and southwest regions.

In the video, the kidnappers force six of the children to give their names and the names of their parents.

The children say they do not know where they are being held.

The men kidnappers say they will only release the children when they achieve what they want.

“We shall only release you after the struggle. “You will be going to school now here,” say the men.

While the video could not be independently verified, parents have been reacting on social media and saying they recognise their children in the video.

Hundreds have been killed in Cameroon’s English-speaking regions in the past year, where violence between armed separatists and the military have increased since a government crackdown against protesters in the northwest and southwest regions.

They claim that as the English-speaking minority they are marginalised by the French-speaking government.

Violent separatists took up arms to destabilise the Anglophone regions to win independence for the areas they want to declare a separate state, which they call Ambazonia.

Last week separatist militants attacked workers on a state-run rubber plantation in restive southwestern Cameroon, chopping off their fingers because the men had defied an order to stay away from the farms.

An American missionary also died in the northwest region around Bamenda after he was shot in the head amid fighting between armed separatists and soldiers in nort-west Cameroon.