The Presidency on Monday, June 8, 2026, used the ongoing Oyo school abduction crisis to call on Nigerian citizens to report suspicious activity to security agencies, as rescue operations for over 40 pupils and teachers taken from three schools in Oriire Local Government Area entered their fourth week without a confirmed breakthrough.
The Presidency’s statement described the Oyo abduction as a painful reminder of the stakes of community silence in the face of criminal planning. Officials argued that many such attacks are preceded by observable patterns that communities notice but fail to report, and that closing that intelligence gap was essential to breaking the cycle of kidnapping that has spread across multiple regions of the country.
Meanwhile, the Nigerian Air Force continued aerial surveillance operations over the forest terrain in the Oke-Ogun zone, where security forces believe the abductors are holding the victims. Ground operations involving the Army, Police, Amotekun Corps, Civil Defence, and local hunters were also continuing across the Old Oyo National Park axis.
Teacher’s Final Lesson Moves Nigeria
A photograph of a chalkboard bearing what was described as a final lesson written by one of the abducted teachers continued to circulate widely on social media this week, with the words ‘I will be great’ visible on the board. The image prompted an outpouring of grief and solidarity across Nigerian social media platforms, intensifying public pressure on both the federal and state governments to secure the victims’ release.
Governor Seyi Makinde had previously described the abduction as a moment of national distress and urged politicians against politicising the tragedy. However, the political row sparked by former Ekiti Governor Ayo Fayose’s allegation that the Oyo State government orchestrated the attack continued to generate controversy, with the PDP sharply rejecting the claim and the Makinde administration dismissing it as reckless.
Furthermore, Father Ejike Mbaka, a Catholic priest known for his public political commentary, said in a video that those trying to use the Oyo abduction to overthrow President Tinubu through political pressure would not succeed. ‘If they want to overthrow Tinubu it’s not by kidnapping our children,’ Mbaka said, drawing mixed reactions from Nigerians online who argued that the focus should remain on the victims rather than political positioning.
Delta Gunrunner Syndicate Busted
In related security news, the Delta State Police arrested four suspected gunrunners in operations spanning Bayelsa and Imo States, dismantling a syndicate linked to the illegal supply of firearms in the Niger Delta region. In addition, troops in Niger State arrested five suspected bandit informants, recovering mobile phones, cash, and propaganda materials linked to ongoing bandit networks. As a result, security agencies are conducting simultaneous operations across multiple states to degrade criminal infrastructure even as high-profile abductions continue to command national headlines.
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