Anguish as Oyo Students in Captivity Spend One Month
Anguish as Oyo Students in Captivity Spend One Month

Forty-six children aged two to 16, along with staff members, have spent over a month in captivity after gunmen stormed two schools on the edges of Old Oyo National Park in Oyo state on May 15. Nigeria's army has attributed the attack to jihadist group Boko Haram, marking a deeply alarming expansion of jihadist activity into southwestern Nigeria, long considered one of the country's safest regions.

Families Devastated: 'No More Schooling for Them Here'

Sisters Deborah Oyedele and Abosede Ojedele, whose sons are among the abducted, have been taking turns consoling each other in their home in Yawota. Ojedele's three-year-old daughter Hannah has been asking for her brothers and cousin. 'She does not understand why she has not been seeing them,' Ojedele said.

For their mother, Funmilayo Ojo, the ordeal carries additional regret — she had encouraged her daughter-in-law, Mary Akanbi, to relocate to Yawota to take up a teaching job. Akanbi and her two-year-old toddler were among the 25 people seized from Yawota Baptist Nursery and Primary School. 'There will be no more schooling for them here. No parent would willingly send a child to a school where bandits have kidnapped students,' Ojo said.

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Failed Rescue Mission: Hunters Engaged Kidnappers in Two-Hour Firefight

Four witnesses told AFP the attackers swept into the towns on motorcycles dressed in military fatigues. A local hunter said a joint team of troops, Amotekun operatives, and hunters rode about 40 motorcycles for about five hours into the forest reserve on May 16 before engaging the kidnappers in a two-hour firefight. 'They started shooting at us when they heard the sound of our motorcycles,' the hunter said. He said one person had been killed and several others injured by a bomb hidden in a motorcycle abandoned by the kidnappers.

Teachers' Strike: NUT Demands Security Before Schools Reopen

The National Union of Teachers directed primary and secondary school teachers in Oyo State to withdraw their services until further notice. A teacher in nearby Iseyin said the situation could lead to a decline in school enrolment if left unchecked. 'We don't feel safe. If (the kidnapping) could have happened to them there, honestly, no one is safe,' the teacher said.

The union's state chairman said new security measures were being discussed for vulnerable rural schools, adding that the government had taken the security of schools seriously. A deputy inspector general of police, Fayoade Adegoke, told AFP after meeting with victims' families that efforts were ongoing to secure the safe return of the abducted children and teachers. 'All hands are on deck to make sure that those children and their teachers are brought back safe soon,' Adegoke said.

Oyo Gov Speaks on Another Loss

Seyi Makinde, the governor of Oyo, on Tuesday, June 16, announced that a lieutenant in the Nigerian Army was recently killed amid ongoing efforts to rescue the kidnapped Oriire schoolchildren and teachers. He made the disclosure while addressing protesters led by activist and social media influencer Martins Otse, popularly known as VeryDarkMan (VDM), in Ibadan.

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