Lagos Protesters Demand Rescue of Abducted Oyo Schoolchildren Amid Growing Insecurity!
Reported by Fasesan Marian opeyemi | Editor-in-Chief at Sele Media Africa.
LAGOS, Nigeria — Hundreds of residents in Lagos marched on Wednesday to protest the escalating insecurity in Nigeria, demanding the immediate and safe rescue of an unspecified number of schoolchildren and teachers abducted from a school in Oyo State. The demonstrators, carrying placards and chanting slogans, urged federal and state authorities to intensify search-and-rescue operations and address the systemic failures that have allowed armed groups to repeatedly target educational institutions.
The protest, which converged at the Lagos State Secretariat in Alausa, Ikeja, reflects a deepening public anxiety over the nation’s security crisis. Citizens expressed frustration at the government’s perceived inability to protect vulnerable populations, particularly children, from a wave of kidnappings that has plagued the country in recent years. The demonstration signals a growing grassroots demand for accountability and immediate action from security agencies.
A Wave of Abductions Targeting Schools
The protest in Lagos was triggered by the latest attack on a school in Oyo State, where armed men stormed the premises and abducted an unknown number of students and teachers. While official figures remain unconfirmed, local reports from Channels Television and Punch Newspapers suggest the assailants targeted the institution during school hours, a tactic that has become alarmingly common across northern and southwestern Nigeria.
This incident is part of a broader pattern of insecurity targeting educational facilities. In 2021, over 300 schoolboys were abducted from the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara, Katsina State, an event that drew international condemnation. More recently, similar attacks have occurred in Zamfara, Kaduna, and Niger states. The Oyo abduction, however, has struck a particular nerve in Lagos, a megacity that has largely been spared such direct attacks on schools but remains deeply connected to the national security landscape.
Security & Conflict: The Strategic Failure
The persistent targeting of schools represents a significant strategic failure in Nigeria’s security architecture. According to security analysts, these attacks are not random acts of banditry but calculated operations aimed at extracting ransoms, creating widespread fear, and undermining state authority. The protesters in Lagos highlighted that the government’s reliance on a purely military response has proven insufficient, urging a multi-faceted approach that includes intelligence gathering, community policing, and socio-economic interventions.
“We are tired of the government’s empty promises,” said Mrs. Folake Adeyemi, a teacher and protest organiser. “Our children are being taken from their classrooms, and the authorities seem unable to stop it. We demand the immediate rescue of the Oyo schoolchildren and a comprehensive plan to secure every school in Nigeria.”
The protest also underscored the geopolitical dimension of the crisis. The abduction in Oyo, a state in the South-West, challenges the narrative that such attacks are confined to the conflict-ridden North-East and North-West. It signals a geographical expansion of the threat, placing pressure on regional security collaborations like the Amotekun security network, which operates in the South-West states.
Public Outcry and Government Response
The Lagos protest drew a diverse crowd, including parents, students, civil society activists, and market women. Many held signs reading “Bring Back Our Children” and “End Insecurity Now.” The demonstrators called for the immediate deployment of special forces to Oyo State and demanded transparency from the government regarding the number of victims and the progress of rescue efforts.
In a statement, the Lagos State Police Command acknowledged the protest and assured residents of their safety. However, the protesters remained skeptical, citing a lack of tangible results from previous security pledges. The Oyo State Government, through its Commissioner for Information, confirmed that security agencies were working to locate the abducted victims but provided no details on the operation.
The federal government, through the National Security Adviser’s office, has yet to issue a direct statement on the protest or the Oyo abduction. This silence has further fueled public anger, with critics accusing the administration of President Bola Tinubu of being disconnected from the daily realities of insecurity faced by ordinary Nigerians.
Pan-African and Global Significance
The abduction of schoolchildren in Nigeria is not merely a national crisis but a Pan-African and global concern. The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has repeatedly warned that attacks on schools are a violation of international humanitarian law and a direct assault on the future of the continent. The incident in Oyo adds Nigeria to a growing list of African nations—including Burkina Faso, Mali, and Cameroon—where armed groups have systematically targeted educational institutions.
For the global community, the continued insecurity in Nigeria undermines investment, tourism, and diplomatic relations. The country, Africa’s largest economy and most populous nation, is seen as a bellwether for regional stability. The failure to protect its children sends a troubling signal about the state of governance and security across the continent.
What Happens Next
The immediate priority for security forces is the safe rescue of the abducted schoolchildren and teachers in Oyo State. Historically, such rescues have taken weeks or months, with many victims being released only after ransom payments—a practice the government officially condemns but has been accused of facilitating in the past.
In the longer term, the Lagos protest has added to the political pressure on the Tinubu administration to declare a national state of emergency on security. Civil society groups are already planning further demonstrations in Abuja and other state capitals. The government’s response—whether through military action, policy reform, or dialogue—will determine whether the current wave of protests subsides or escalates into a broader movement demanding systemic change.
For now, the families of the abducted victims in Oyo wait in agony, while the people of Lagos have made it clear: they are watching, and they will not remain silent.
SOURCES
BBC News, Channels Television, Punch Newspapers, Vanguard News, Premium Times.