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46 Oyo schoolchildren held five weeks as Tinubu's security emergency strains

46 Oyo schoolchildren held five weeks as Tinubu's security emergency strains

Gunmen seized pupils aged 2 to 16 and seven teachers in May; one teacher murdered, the rest still captive in June, amid a wider wave of mass abductions and Middle-Belt killings

Leaders·Conflicts· worsening Ce qui a cassé·Comment la vie change ·11 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

On 15 May 2026 gunmen seized 46 pupils, aged 2 to 16, and seven teachers from schools in Oriire LGA, Oyo State, Nigeria, near Old Oyo National Park. Five-plus weeks later they remained held; the abductors murdered teacher Michael Oyedokun, and as of 22 June the Deputy IGP said agencies were still working to free them — police denying a viral "all rescued" claim attributed to a presidential aide. On 31 May Bola Tinubu approved 1,000 forest guards and a tactical unit, with Chief of Staff Femi Gbajabiamila leading a federal delegation. The case sits atop a national security emergency declared in late November 2025 (402-plus abducted across four north-central states that month) and continuing Benue and Plateau Middle-Belt killings. In his 12 June Democracy Day address Tinubu announced 50,000-plus police recruitment and cited the 2026 budget's N5.41 trillion security allocation.

By the numbers

  • 46 + 7 — pupils (aged 2-16) and teachers seized on 15 May 2026; one teacher murdered, the rest still held.
  • 5+ weeks — duration of the captivity as of 22 June 2026.
  • 1,000 — forest guards Tinubu approved on 31 May; 50,000+ police recruitment announced.
  • N5.41 trillion — security allocation in the 2026 budget.
  • 402+ — people abducted across four north-central states in November 2025 alone.

Why it matters

Insecurity is the charge that most undercuts Bola Tinubu's reform record heading into a 2027 contest: a five-week child abduction in the relatively secure South-West, atop Middle-Belt massacres, signals the violence is spreading beyond the north-east. Emergency declarations and forest guards have not yet translated into protection.

What to watch

  • Whether the Oyo captives are freed, and on what terms (the Oyo governor vowed no negotiation).
  • Whether the forest-guard and police-recruitment measures change facts on the ground.
  • The trajectory of Benue/Plateau killings and the federal response.
  • Whether insecurity becomes the defining 2027 campaign issue against Tinubu.