She asked the question many Nigerians have been avoiding. Why did the outrage fade so quickly?
Nollywood producer and entertainment executive Mary Njoku has publicly expressed outrage over the continued captivity of kidnapped Oyo State schoolchildren, questioning what she described as a troubling sense of public apathy toward Nigeria’s ongoing security crisis. Her comments, confirmed by Punch Newspapers, have added another influential voice to the growing chorus demanding sustained national attention on the abduction case.
What Njoku Said
Njoku pointed out that the abduction of more than 40 students and teachers from Oriire Local Government Area in May initially generated significant national attention, prompting strikes, protests, and government statements. However, she observed that as weeks passed without resolution, public conversation moved on to other topics, leaving the affected families to continue their wait largely out of the spotlight.
She questioned Nigeria’s collective response to insecurity more broadly, asking why outrage tends to fade once a story stops trending, even when the underlying crisis remains unresolved. Her remarks resonated widely on social media, where many users acknowledged the discomfort of recognising their own shifting attention.
A Pattern That Repeats
Njoku’s comments echo concerns raised by other public figures in recent weeks. Femi Falana and Falz led a major Democracy Day protest specifically citing the Oyo children. Davido wore a jacket bearing their names at the FIFA World Cup Countdown Concert in Los Angeles. Each of these moments generated a fresh wave of attention. However, none has yet produced the outcome that matters most — the safe return of the children.
Furthermore, the death of retired Major General Rabe Abubakar in separate bandit captivity in Katsina, and the subsequent shooting of his wife during her rescue, has added further weight to the argument that Nigeria’s kidnapping crisis demands sustained, not episodic, national focus.
What Njoku Is Calling For
Njoku has called on Nigerians, particularly those with public platforms, to keep the conversation alive until the Oyo children are safely returned home. She argued that consistent pressure, rather than periodic outrage, is what ultimately drives government accountability.
Her intervention adds to a growing recognition among Nigeria’s cultural figures that entertainment platforms carry genuine influence over public discourse. Whether that influence translates into sustained pressure on security agencies remains to be seen. However, voices like Njoku’s ensure the conversation does not disappear quietly.
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