The family -- a couple, their children aged five, eight, 10 and 12 and an uncle -- were snatched in northern Cameroon by six gunmen on three motorbikes yesterday and officials said they had been taken across the border into Nigeria.
With the latest abduction, France has overtaken the United States as the country with the most number of hostages held abroad, with 15 nationals in captivity against nine Americans.
"We are doing everything with the help of authorities in Cameroon and Nigeria to find our compatriots," government spokeswoman Najat Vallaud-Belkacem quoted Hollande as telling a cabinet meeting.
The French foreign ministry in a notice urged citizens in the far north "to leave the area as quickly as possible" and advised against travel to areas bordering Nigeria until further notice.
Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said France would not give in to "terrorists," a seeming allusion that ransom will not be considered.
"This adds to the other hostage-takings. Sadly France is one the countries that is perhaps most affected by this," he said.
French authorities have launched a preliminary investigation into the "kidnapping staged by a terrorist organisation," a judicial source said. Such cases are routinely opened when crimes are committed against French citizens abroad.
The ministry could not say how many French citizens are believed to be in the north but 6,200 in total are registered as living in Cameroon.
"We believe that the Boko Haram sect carried out this kidnapping, but we don't yet have a claim of responsibility," Le Drian told France 2 television.
"These are groups that claim the same fundamentalism, who use the same methods, whether it's in Mali, Somalia or Nigeria," he said.
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