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2027: Kwankwaso unveils Gwarzo as NDC governorship candidate

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FORMER Kano State Governor and leader of the Kwankwasiyya movement, Rabiu Kwankwaso, has presented Aminu Gwarzo as the governorship candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) for the 2027 election in the state.

Kwankwaso also confirmed Nasiru Gawuna as the party’s choice for the Kano Central Senatorial seat.

The announcement was contained in a statement released on Friday by Kwankwaso on his official X account, following consultations among party stakeholders.

According to him, the selection process reflected the party’s commitment to fairness, competence, loyalty and equal representation.

“I am delighted to announce that His Excellency, Comrade Aminu Abdussalam Gwarzo has been selected as our Kano NDC Gubernatorial Candidate for the upcoming elections. Similarly, Dr. Nasiru Yusuf Gawuna will contest for the Kano Central Senatorial Seat. This decision was made in the spirit of equity, fairness, loyalty, and competence — values that remain central to our party and Kwankwasiyya’s progress and unity,” he wrote.

Kwankwaso further expressed confidence in the party’s preparations ahead of the affirmation exercise holding today and prayed for success in the coming polls.

Gwarzo is regarded as one of Kwankwaso’s longtime political associates. He previously served as Deputy Governor of Kano State under Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf before stepping down from office.

He also worked as Commissioner for State Affairs under Kwankwaso and was formerly the chairman in Gwarzo Local Government Area.

After leaving the deputy governor’s office following Yusuf’s defection to the All Progressives Congress, Gwarzo joined the African Democratic Congress alongside Kwankwaso before both politicians later aligned with the NDC.

Gawuna previously served as deputy governor during the administration of former Kano State Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje.

He was also the Kano State APC governorship candidate in the 2023 election.

The ICIR reports that Kwankwaso, formerly of the New Nigeria Peoples’ Party (ANPP), quit the party and pitched his tent with the ADC, following his political godson’s (the incumbent Kano governor) defection to the APC.

Kwankwanso, who described Yusuf’s movement to the APC as shocking, has expressed his readiness to be the running mate to former Anambra State Governor, Peter Obi, who is seeking to secure the NDC presidential ticket in the 2027 election.

Five ways Nigeria has stabilised under my watch – Tinubu

PRESIDENT Bola Tinubu on Tuesday stated that various sectors of Nigeria’s economy and governance have recorded progress under his administration since he assumed office on May 29, 2023.

He attributed the progress to the policies initiated by his government, including subsidy removal, unification of exchange rates, and other fiscal reforms.

In a statement commemorating his three years in power, Tinubu highlighted key sectors where he said his administration achieved significant achievements, namely the economy, infrastructure, agriculture, education, security, and others.

“Today, on the occasion of the third anniversary of our administration, I speak to you not only as your president but also as a fellow citizen who understands the sacrifices many families have made in recent years and shares your hopes for a better Nigeria,” he said.

The ICIR presents five key sectors the president identified as having performed well under his administration.

Economy and public finances

Tinubu said Nigeria economy was more stable and competitive after fuel subsidy removal, consequently avoiding a deeper economic crisis and reforming the foreign exchange market. He noted that Nigeria spent over N4 trillion on petrol subsidies in 2022.

The president also claimed the stock market grew from N30 trillion market capitalisation in 2023 to N160 trillion in 2026.

“At the height of the subsidy regime, Nigeria was spending as much as ₦18.4 billion daily to sustain petrol subsidies – over ₦4 trillion in 2022 alone -resources that could have been invested in roads, healthcare, education, housing, and critical infrastructure. Multiple exchange rate windows and forex arbitrage created massive distortions, with Nigeria losing more than ₦8 trillion over three years to rent-seeking and speculative practices,” he said.

Infrastructure and energy projects

The president listed major roads, rail projects, and energy investments as signs of recovery, citing Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, Abuja-Kaduna-Zaria-Kano Road, East-West Road and Nigeria LNG Limited Train 7 project.

He explained that local refining capacity had improved, and the country continued to reduce fuel import dependence

“In the oil and gas sector, the reforms we instituted have attracted billions of dollars in fresh investment from the international oil companies that had shunned our country. The $5 billion NLNG Train 7 project is nearing completion to boost LNG production capacity, exports, and dividends,” he stated.

Agriculture and food security

Tinubu said his administration supported millions of farmers through fertiliser and seedlings. He also listed irrigation, mechanisation, agricultural financing as part of his government’s efforts to make the sector more productive.

“Agricultural interventions have supported millions of farmers by improving seedlings, fertilisers, mechanisation, and irrigation and by expanding access to finance and markets. We are opening new agricultural corridors to create jobs, strengthen supply chains, and reduce pressure on household incomes,” he said.

Education, housing and social programmes

Tinubu said the Nigerian Education Loan Fund supported over 1.5 million students. According to him, over N282 billion has been disbursed in student loans, and more than 10,000 housing units were under construction across 14 states and the FCT.

“Our Renewed Hope Housing Programme, along with that of the Federal Housing Authority (FHA), is delivering over 10,000 housing units across 14 states and the FCT, creating over 300,000 jobs and expanding access to affordable housing. Major Renewed Hope Cities in Abuja, Lagos, and Kano are progressing steadily. Our consumer credit initiative, CREDICORP, is opening up new economic opportunities for workers and families,” he added.

Security and national stability

The president said security remained central to his administration and claimed progress was being made against terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, oil theft, and other criminal networks. He noted that more communities and highways were becoming safer, and security agencies were receiving improved technology and logistics, including improvement in inter-agency coordination.

“Our Armed Forces and security agencies have intensified operations against terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, oil thieves, and criminal networks. While challenges remain, many communities and highways are becoming safer and more economically active. We continue investing in intelligence, surveillance, logistics, technology, and inter-agency coordination,” he said.

Hardship, insecurity, other challenges remain despite president’s claims

Meanwhile, many Nigerians are yet to feel the impact of the administration’s acclaimed reforms, as many households continue to languish in poverty. Many farmers have fled their farms due to insecurity, while thousands of citizens remain in kidnappers’ dens.

Power supply remains epileptic or non-existent in many communities, and basic amenities, including good roads, potable water, schools, and healthcare facilities, are either unavailable or in a dilapidated state across several parts of the country.

Food prices have remained sky-high, leaving many citizens unable to afford decent housing. Building costs and rent have soared since the president assumed office, alongside the prices of other basic necessities. The ICIR further reports that unemployment remains high, while corruption and insecurity continue to persist under the president’s watch.

 

 

Tinubu defends economic reforms amid continued hardship, persistent insecurity

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PRESIDENT Bola Tinubu has again defended the sweeping economic reforms introduced since he assumed office in 2023, insisting Nigeria would have drifted into “fiscal breakdown” if his administration had failed to remove fuel subsidy and unify the foreign exchange market.

In a statement marking the third anniversary of his administration on Thursday, May 29, Tinubu acknowledged the severe hardship triggered by the policies but maintained that Nigeria had now “stabilised and is moving forward again.”

The president’s remarks came amid persistent inflation, rising living costs, worsening poverty and lingering insecurity across several parts of the country, despite repeated government assurances that reforms are yielding results.

“The easy choices would have been politically convenient. But leadership demands courage, especially when the right decisions are difficult,” Tinubu said.

“Had we refused to act, our nation would have drifted toward fiscal breakdown, worsening poverty, and severe economic uncertainty,” he added.

Tinubu defended the controversial removal of petrol subsidies shortly after assuming office, saying Nigeria had previously spent as much as ₦18.4 billion daily sustaining the regime, amounting to over ₦4 trillion in 2022.

He also blamed multiple exchange-rate windows for massive distortions in the economy.

He claimed Nigeria lost more than ₦8 trillion over three years to forex arbitrage and speculative activities.

While admitting that the reforms triggered painful sacrifices for Nigerians, Tinubu insisted the decisions had laid the foundation for recovery.

“I remain deeply conscious of those sacrifices, and I assure you: your sacrifice has not been in vain,” he said.

The president pointed to what he described as signs of economic recovery, including rising investor confidence, improvements in public finances and growth in the capital market.

According to him, the Nigerian stock market capitalisation rose from ₦30 trillion in 2023 to ₦160 trillion in 2026, while the All Share Index climbed from 53,000 to 250,000.

Tinubu also highlighted infrastructure projects being executed nationwide, including the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, Sokoto-Badagry Super Highway, Abuja-Kaduna-Zaria-Kano Road and the East-West Road.

The president further claimed that reforms in the oil and gas sector had attracted billions of dollars in fresh investments and improved local refining capacity, reducing Nigeria’s dependence on imported petroleum products.

He stressed that the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) had provided loans worth over ₦282 billion to more than 1.5 million students, while the Renewed Hope Housing Programme was delivering over 10,000 housing units across 14 states and the Federal Capital Territory.

Tinubu acknowledges persistent insecurity 

On insecurity, Tinubu acknowledged that security challenges persisted but said military and security operations against terrorists, kidnappers, bandits and oil thieves were yielding results.

The ICIR reports that Nigeria has continued to battle multiple security threats, including Boko Haram and ISWAP insurgency in the North-East, banditry and mass kidnappings in the North-West, North-Central, and now the South-West

Within Tinubu’s first eight months in office, civil society groups and security trackers reported worsening violence across several parts of the country.

Data by Community of Practice against Mass Atrocities estimated that at least 4,416 people were killed and 2,653 abducted during Tinubu’s first year in 2023.

One of the defining security crises under Tinubu has been the resurgence of mass abductions, particularly kidnappings in schools in northern Nigeria.

In March 2024, armed men abducted at least 137 pupils and students from Kuriga in Kaduna State in one of the largest school kidnappings recorded in recent years.

Before that year ended, no fewer than 5,300 people were killed and more than 5100 abducted across the country.

Although the Federal Government repeatedly announced military successes against insurgents and bandits, attacks persisted through 2025 and 2026.

Banditry expanded across Zamfara, Kaduna, Katsina, Sokoto and Niger states, while attacks increasingly affected parts of the North-Central and South-West.

In February 2026, suspected jihadists reportedly attacked villages in Kwara State, killing more than 160 people in one of the deadliest assaults recorded in the region in recent years.

The period also witnessed controversies over military airstrikes.

The president nevertheless urged Nigerians not to lose faith in the country, insisting that the nation was gradually overcoming its challenges.

“While we continue to confront the challenges head-on, progress is being made. I want to assure you that this government will not relent until every Nigerian can live, work, travel, and dream in safety,” he said.

Ekiti court remands ADC House of Assembly candidate over alleged rape

A magistrate court in Ado Ekiti has remanded the African Democratic Congress (ADC) candidate for Ado Constituency I in the Ekiti State House of Assembly, Ayodele Babatola, over an alleged rape case.

According to the Cable, Babatola was recently arrested and detained by operatives of the Ekiti State Police Command.

In a statement, the command’s spokesperson, Abutu Sunday, said a 30-year-old woman, reported that Babatola “forcefully had carnal knowledge of her at KIIBAT Hotel, along Petim Estate, Adebayo Area, Ado-Ekiti, on the night of May 24, 2026”.

“Upon the receipt of the complaint, the suspect was invited, his statement was taken and after a preliminary investigation, the case was transferred to the State CID for a thorough investigation,” Sunday said.

The spokesperson said the complainant informed police operatives that she was assaulted and sustained injuries during the incident, claiming he became angry after the woman allegedly demanded payment before sex. He said the injuries sustained by the woman were visible to officers on duty at the time.

“During investigation, the suspect stated that he was provoked when the victim asked him for payment before having sexual intercourse with her. He claimed that he did not actually penetrate the victim before he got provoked by her request for financial compensation, but accepted that he left her in the room and deactivated all her means of reaching him.

Sunday further stated that the victim was taken to hospital for medical examination, which allegedly confirmed penetration, adding that the suspect was subsequently charged to court after investigations were concluded and has since been remanded at the Correctional Service Centre in Ado-Ekiti.

Meanwhile, some ADC members on Wednesday staged a protest in Ekiti over Babatola’s detention, describing his arrest as politically motivated.

Speaking during a press conference organised by ADC stakeholders in the state, Gboyega Aribisogan, a party chieftain, alleged that Babatola’s arrest and detention were linked to his criticism of the Ekiti State Government.

Aribisogan also accused officers of the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) in Ekiti of targeting critics and opposition members through arrests and detention, alleging that the officers were using “Form K”, a remand warrant request, to imprison innocent residents in the state.

Presidency goofs, falsely accuses VDM over doctored ‘Tinubu audio’

FINDINGS have shown that the Presidency goofed after threatening social media commentator Martins Otse, popularly known as VeryDarkMan (VDM), over a manipulated audio clip falsely attributed to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

The controversial doctored audio the Presidency was referring to was not part of original video posted by VDM.

Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, had on Wednesday called for the activist’s prosecution, accusing him of disseminating fake audio linked to the president.

“This VDM needs to face the weight of the law for being the conveyor and disseminator of a fake audio of President Tinubu. This is a clear case of an egregious abuse of the social media platform,” Onanuga wrote on his verified X account.

The presidential aide was reacting to a viral clip circulating online in which AI-generated voice notes resembling Tinubu’s voice made controversial remarks about insecurity in the South-East, opposition parties, borrowing from the World Bank, and the 2027 general election.

The video was shared by an X user, @Pious_minister, who alleged that the doctored audio of the President was used in one of VDM’s videos.

“How do you really convince someone who has already decided and believes in their mind that this is actually Asiwaju’s voice? What kind of cheap propaganda is this?

“VDM knows that Ibos are highly emotional people, and that’s why he enjoys riding on their emotions,” the user wrote.

However, checks by The FactCheckHub show that the viral clip did not originate from VDM’s original upload.

FINDINGS

Findings by The FactCheckHub show that the video in circulation is a manipulated version of Instagram video posted by VDM on Tuesday, May 26.

In the original footage, the activist was reacting to comments made by content creator and philanthropist Mitchell “King Mitchy” Mukoro, who had alleged that his necklace was a charm and claimed he visited a shrine.

Screenshot of the original post made by VDM

Responding, VDM played an old campaign clip of Tinubu speaking about electricity and governance ahead of the 2023 presidential election.

In the original campaign footage aired by TVC News, Tinubu had said Nigerians should not vote for him for a second term if he failed to improve electricity supply.

“Whichever way, by all means necessary, you must have electricity, and you won’t pay for estimated bills anymore. A promise made will be a promise kept. If I don’t keep my promise and I run for a second term, don’t vote for me. That’s the truth,” Tinubu said in the original clip.

However, findings show that an unidentified individual later extracted portions of VDM’s original video and inserted a doctored voice note resembling the president’s voice.

The edited clip retained the opening section of VDM’s original video before switching to the fabricated audio, creating the false impression that the activist shared or endorsed the recordings himself.

The manipulated version subsequently circulated widely on social media and appeared to have prompted Onanuga’s call for VDM’s prosecution.

VDM blasts Presidency

Reacting in a video posted on his social media page, VDM lampooned Onanuga, insisting that he would not defend the controversial AI-generated clip.

The activist criticised the Presidency for reacting swiftly to the manipulated audio while allegedly remaining silent over recent insecurity incidents, including the abduction of teachers and pupils in Oyo State.

“Bandits went into a school in Oyo State, they carried three teachers, one man, two women, they carried students. One of the teachers was backing an infant child. Few days later, there was a report that one of the teachers was beheaded. Bayo Onanuga, where is your comment on that?”

“As I speak to you today, it is Children’s Day. Those children are still in an unknown location. I want to see wetin una wan do. It’s only stupid people that will believe that video,” he wrote.

VDM’s lawyers faults Presidency’s verification process

Reacting to the accusation, VDM’s lawyers, Deji Adeyanju & Partners, accused the Presidency of failing to verify the authenticity and origin of the manipulated clip before publicly attacking their client.

“A simple verification of our client’s verified social media platforms would have confirmed that he neither made nor shared the said audio,” the lawyers stated.

They further described the Presidency’s comments as premature and unsupported by evidence.

“It is therefore surprising that, despite the resources available to the Presidency, adverse comments were made concerning our client without proper verification of the facts,” the team added.

The lawyers called on security agencies to investigate the actual source of the doctored audio and identify those responsible for creating and circulating it.

This report is co-published with FactCheckHub

Slain ISIS second-in-command responsible for killing of Christians in Nigeria – US

United State Secretary of Defence, Pete Hegseth, has said that the late second-in-command of ISIS, Abu-Bilal Al-Minuki, was largely responsible for attacks on Christians in Nigeria.

Hegseth stated this during a press conference at the White House on Wednesday. He said the US President Donald Trump directed the Pentagon to prioritise the protection of Christians in Nigeria targeted by Islamic State of Iraq and Syria-linked groups.

“Maybe a year ago, he heard the call of Nigerian Christians who were being targeted and killed by ISIS in Nigeria, and he said, ‘Pete, I want the War Department to focus on ensuring that we do everything we can to protect those Christians,’” Hegseth said.

The ICIR reported that US troops began targeting Islamist terrorists late last year following allegations of a Christian genocide in Nigeria, and Al-Minuki was killed on May 15 during a joint US-Nigerian operation targeting his compound in the Lake Chad Basin.

Trump and Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu, who confirmed Al-Minuki’s death, said several of the ISIS commander’s lieutenants were also killed during the operation.

Hegseth in his latest remarks, said the operation involved extensive covert coordination and the deployment of military assets, adding that intelligence obtained during the mission contributed to the killing of Al-Minuki, ISIS’s second-in-command, in a joint operation by US and Nigerian forces in the Lake Chad Basin.

“And we got the assets there, and over the last month, and there hasn’t been much coverage of this, we killed ISIS number two in Nigeria, who’s most responsible for killing Christians and trying to target the U.S. homeland,” he stated.

He said high-grade intelligence gathered since the launch of US operations against ISIS in Nigeria had resulted in the elimination of hundreds of additional ISIS fighters allegedly linked to attacks on Christians in the country.

“So, there are a lot of things we do that the media pays attention to, and a lot of things that the president empowers the Department to do on behalf of the American people that he deserves great credit for,” Hegseth stated.

The US defence chief described the operation as part of the Trump administration’s broader commitment to counterterrorism efforts and the protection of vulnerable communities.

Atiku secures ADC presidential ticket in disputed primary

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FORMER Vice President Atiku Abubakar has emerged as the presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) after winning the party’s controversial presidential primary.

The party on Wednesday, May 27, announced that Abubakar polled 1,846,370 votes to defeat his closest challenger, former Rivers State governor and ex-Minister of Transportation Rotimi Amaechi, who secured 504,117 votes.

Businessman Mohammed Hayatu-Deen came third with 177,120 votes.

Abubakar’s 1.8 million votes in the primary immediately sparked comparisons with the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate and incumbent President Bola Tinubu’s controversial 10.9 million-vote haul during the party’s presidential primary last weekend.

The ICIR reports that the figure drew widespread public skepticism and criticism from opposition parties, with many claiming it was a manufactured number.

Protest by Amaechi, Hayatu-Deen

Abubakar’s victory, however, came amid protests by Amaechi and Hayatu-Deen, who had rejected the exercise over alleged rigging and widespread voter disenfranchisement.

Amaechi, in a statement posted on his X handle on Tuesday, May 26, described the process as neither free nor transparent and rejected what he called “concocted results.”

“Following reports of widespread voter disenfranchisement in most parts of the country during the African Democratic Congress (ADC) presidential primaries yesterday, I unequivocally reject the concocted results being announced,” he said.

The former minister alleged that nearly 80 per cent of party members were prevented from voting during the exercise.

“There’s no way that about eighty per cent of members of the party were not allowed to vote, and you expect me to accept such results,” he added.

Amaechi further argued that the ADC could not accuse the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) of electoral malpractice while allegedly engaging in similar conduct.

Hayatu-Deen also distanced himself from the process, saying he would not attend the official announcement of the results due to concerns over alleged irregularities.

I will not be attending the announcement of the ADC presidential election results today. I am concerned by reports from across the country of widespread vote rigging, some of which I myself observed, and will therefore be taking advice on my next steps,” he said.

Abubakar’s victory

Announcing the final results on Wednesday, the National Chairman of the ADC, David Mark, said the party allowed a free contest and gave members the opportunity to choose their preferred candidate.

According to him, although the exercise was not perfect, there was room for improvement.

Mark noted that all the aspirants were qualified to lead the country, but only one person could emerge as the party’s presidential flagbearer.

In a post on X shortly after his victory was announced, Abubakar thanked party members for entrusting him with the ADC ticket and described the coalition behind the party as a movement formed to ‘rescue’ Nigeria’s democracy.

He accused the APC-led Federal Government of undermining opposition parties through intimidation, coercion and the use of state institutions.

The former vice president also alleged that opposition politicians were being harassed and cited the detention of former Kaduna State governor Nasir El-Rufai despite court orders granting him bail.

Abubakar further warned against what he described as attempts by the Presidency, INEC and the judiciary to interfere in the affairs of the ADC.

He congratulated Amaechi and Hayatu-Deen for participating in the exercise and called for unity within the party ahead of the 2027 polls.

“This is not the time to celebrate. No one was defeated because we are one party and we all need to recognise the fierce urgency of the moment,” he said.

Also, in an interview with journalists after the exercise, the former vicee president said he would personally reach out to his opponents.

“I will personally visit my own competitors, Rotimi Amaechi and Mohammed Hayatu-Deen, and appeal to them to come onboard,” he said.

The ICIR reports that the dispute adds to the internal challenges that have trailed the opposition coalition built around the ADC ahead of the 2027 elections.

The coalition had attracted several opposition figures, including former Anambra State governor Peter Obi and former Kano State governor Rabiu Kwankwaso, before both politicians later exited the platform for the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) amid internal disagreements and legal disputes.

As it stands, Abubakar, who seeks Nigeria’s most exalted political seat for the seventh time, will be competing with Tinubu and others in the election slated for January 16, 2027.

How Oyo’s first major school abduction shattered families, emptied villages

IN the aftermath of what is now known as the first major school-targeted abduction in southwest Nigeria, The ICIR visited Oriire Local Government Area of Oyo State, where gunmen attacked three schools and abducted dozens of pupils, students, and staff. In this report, parents and community members recount the terrifying morning that changed their lives and turned their communities into ghost settlements.


Khadija Umar looked exhausted and emotionally drained. Her face bearing the strain of days without sleep as she spoke about her 8-year-old abducted son, Muhammed Ibrahim.

Seated among other grieving parents, Umar’s son was among the dozens of children abducted when armed men stormed Baptist Nursery and Primary School in Yawota, Oriire Local Government of Oyo state on May 15. The gunmen had also attacked two other schools in the state.

“For the past days, I have not slept or rested,” she told The ICIR, in a trembling voice. “After everything calmed down, we wanted to go and get our children, and that was when we realised they had taken them.”

Relieving the horror of that day, the grieving mother said the gunmen had announced their arrival on motorcycles, wearing military uniforms. Like many others, she mistook them for actual soldiers in pursuit of criminals. Until sporadic gunshots erupted, forcing her and several residents to scamper for safety. 

Khadija Umar

When the gunfire subsided and frightened residents began to emerge from their hideouts, Umar made the discovery that threw her into panic and days of sleepless nights. The terrorists had stormed her son’s school, which is about 10 minutes away, and whisked him away.

Days later, the pain remains fresh. She says some private individuals and politicians recently brought money to the affected parents but they rejected it. “We told them we don’t want money,” Umar said. “It is our children we want.”

The mother of five is one of dozens of parents whose lives were shattered after coordinated attacks on three schools in Oriire Local Government Area. The affected schools are Baptist Nursery and Primary School in Yawota, Community Grammar School and L.A Primary School in Esin Ele, marking what appears to be the first large-scale school-targeted abduction in southwest Nigeria.

Residents say on the day of the attack, armed men had invaded the communities, surrounding schools and abducting pupils, students, and staff, including Alamo Folawe, the Vice Principal of Community Grammar School. They told The ICIR that a total of 46 persons, including seven teachers and 39 students, were abducted from the schools while four motorcycles were snatched from villagers.

Since the incident, schools have been shut down and entire communities transformed into ghost settlements, plunging families into uncertainty.

Esin-Ele community deserted after terror attack

The morning the gunmen came

That Friday had started like any other day in Yawota and Esin Ele. Parents prepared their children for school, farmers set out for their fields, and residents settled into their routines, unaware that within minutes, their communities would descend into chaos.

A few minutes after 9 a.m., armed men riding motorcycles and dressed in military uniforms stormed the communities. Residents had initially mistaken them for security personnel responding to the growing insecurity around the area. That assumption quickly dissolved when gunfire erupted.

According to multiple eyewitness accounts, the attackers split into groups and simultaneously targeted Baptist Nursery and Primary School in Yawota, Community Grammar School, and L.A Primary School in Esin Ele. The coordination of the assault left little room for escape. In Yawota, the gunmen stormed the unfenced school premises with ease, firing shots into the air as terrified pupils and teachers scattered.

Some children fled through classroom windows in the opening moments of the attack before the assailants blocked possible escape routes. Others, particularly younger pupils who were too frightened or too small to escape, were rounded up. Witnesses said the attackers moved quickly, forcing children onto motorcycles, sometimes loading several onto a single bike.

As the attack unfolded in Yawota, another group struck Esin Ele, where both the primary and secondary schools were attacked almost simultaneously. Residents said the armed men appeared organised and heavily armed, moving victims from one point to another with calculated speed. When motorcycles proved insufficient, they reportedly seized vehicles, including one belonging to a school staff, to transport abducted children deeper into nearby forest routes.

Days after the attack, the affected communities remain largely deserted. Families have fled, schools are shut and farms have been abandoned. “Everything we planted is there,” a resident, Olufemi Afolabi, said. “We cannot access it now. Animals are eating it.”

In Esin-Ile, classrooms still tell the story of sudden terror when The ICIR visited. School bags remain where children left them. Exercise books lie open. Tiny sandals sit abandoned. No lessons are taking place.

School materials abandoned by pupils

For many parents, even if their children return, trust in the schools has collapsed.

“I never thought I would withdraw my child,” one of the parents, Ojo Adekunle said. “But if he comes back, I will remove him.”

Agonies of victims’ parents

There is an old saying in many Yoruba communities that it is easier to mourn a dead child than to live with the torment of not knowing where that child is. For Sikiru Abiodun, that painful proverb has become a daily reality since armed men abducted his two-and-a-half-year-old son, Abdulsalam Sikiru.

Describing the toddler as unusually bright for his age, Abiodun said his son was well known and loved in the community. Like many parents in Yawota, he had started that Friday morning without the slightest indication that disaster was approaching.

Sikiru Abiodun’s 2-year-old toddler was among the children abducted

He was sitting outside when he saw armed men arriving on motorcycles. At first, neither he nor the other residents suspected danger. According to him, the men suddenly diverted toward the school, and before residents could fully understand what was happening, gunshots rang out across the community. Panic spread immediately, with residents scrambling for safety.

“We thought they had killed all the children in the school,” he recalled.

In the confusion, some residents asked him to alert local vigilantes. But even as he tried to navigate the chaos, he found himself running into another group of attackers who had apparently split into separate units to carry out the coordinated assault. Abiodun said he narrowly escaped, but not without the terrifying realisation that the attack had been carefully planned.

For Abiodun, the tragedy was devastating, but not entirely shocking. He said the community had experienced recurring security threats in the past, even though though residents had never successfully confronted the armed men.

Since the abduction however, schools have emptied, with frightened parents unwilling to send their children back. But beyond the fear lies a deeper emotional torment for parents like Abiodun, who say the uncertainty is harder to bear than grief itself.

“An adage says it is better for your child to die than for your child to be missing,” he concluded.

Days after the attack, grief remains fresh across Yawota and Esin Ele, where many parents still struggle to process how an ordinary school morning turned into a nightmare. The panic was further fuelled by the video released by the abductors, which showed one of the teachers slain. The victim was later identified as Michael Oyedokun, a mathematics teacher. The rest were videoed pleading for help.

For Esuola Mutairu, the emotional burden is even heavier. The attack took four of his children — Ahmed, 8; Muiz, 5; Sohibu, 12; and Jomiloju, 7 — all in one morning.

Mutairu said he had sent them to school that day, believing they were heading to a safe environment to learn, only to later hear that armed men had stormed the schools, rounded up children, and marched them toward the forest around the reserve.

Struggling to conceal the pain in his voice, he told The ICIR  as he described the days since the abduction as some of the hardest of his life. “It has been heartbreaking,” he said. “We have not experienced peace of mind.”

He said sleep had become almost impossible, as every passing hour without information deepened the family’s anguish.

“I couldn’t sleep,” he said. “Four children! We sent them to school to learn, now we don’t even know where they are.”

Deborah Ayano’s granddaughter, 14-year-old Taiwo Olunlege, was among the victims. According to the old woman, her abducted granddaughter had dreams, saying she often spoke confidently about what she hoped to become.

Deborah Ayano

“She used to tell me she would make it in life and carry me inside her car,” she recalled.

She said the emotional toll has been severe. Since the abduction, she has barely eaten, struggled to sleep, and remained in constant distress over her granddaughter’s fate.

Community High School Ahoro Esiele Billboard

“They even brought sleeping pills for me,” she said. “I still couldn’t sleep. If we survive this, we will leave here,” she said.

Olohunloluwa Femi described his nine-year-old daughter, Lydia, as a child whose love for education often outweighed the family’s financial struggles.

He said there were times he discouraged his children from going to school because he simply could not afford some of the associated costs, but Lydia would insist. According to him, she was often the first to wake up in the morning, eager to prepare for school. That determination now haunts him.

The father was on his farm when gunshots shattered the calm that Friday morning. Like many residents in the agrarian community, he had gone out early for work, unaware that armed men were invading the schools back home. It was his older son who called with the devastating news.

When he rushed back, panic had gripped the community. Residents had gathered in confusion, and reports had already emerged that one person had been killed.

He said the most painful for him to bear is the cruel irony that his daughter’s determination to get an education may have placed her directly in harm’s way. “It is that same desire to learn that has now taken her to the kidnappers’ den,” he reiterated.

Like many others in the community, he said insecurity had been lurking around for some time. For years, they heard stories of school kidnappings in distant parts of the country and never imagined such violence would one day arrive at their doorstep. But in recent months, armed attacks had become a growing concern.

Femi’s daughter was among the children abducted
Femi’s daughter was among the children abducted

“Sometimes they kill people on farms,” he said adding that, the attack has destroyed whatever confidence remained in the safety of local schools.

Warning signs ignored?

For some residents, the attack did not come without warning. Ojo Adekunle, whose son Joseph was abducted, said the community had repeatedly raised concerns about insecurity.

“We had been noticing security issues and reporting them to the police, but they did not take us seriously,” he said.

Ojo Adekunle

Residents said there had been past attempted attacks and rising movements of armed men in nearby areas.

“It is not the first time they have been disturbing this community,” said Olohunlowufemi, whose daughter was abducted.

Some residents said local vigilantes existed, but a formal security presence remained weak.

A picture showing one of the residents running away from the Esin-Ele community

One of the community leaders in Yowata, Emmanuel Alade, explained that there have been times when kidnappers killed one of the residents trying to deliver ransom to secure the release of a victim. A resident had also been killed before the attack.

The ICIR also reported that on January 6, 2026, armed attackers launched a deadly assault on Old Oyo National Park located in the Oriire Local Government, killing five forest guards and sending shockwaves through surrounding communities.

Residents of Igbeti, Igboho, Saki, and surrounding communities in the Local Government had told The ICIR at the time that criminal gangs used the forest as a launchpad for kidnappings, farm invasions, and deadly raids, retreating into the park after each operation.

A new front in Nigeria’s school abduction crisis?

Until recently, mass school abductions in Nigeria were largely seen as a crisis confined to the country’s northern region, where armed groups have repeatedly exploited weak rural security, porous borders, and delayed emergency response to targeted schools.

But the coordinated attack on schools in Oyo has confirmed that the threat has now spread to the South West, previously considered relatively safer.

Yawota and Esin Ele, the communities affected by the Oyo attack, are agrarian settlements in the Ogbomoso axis, where many residents depend on farming for survival. Like many rural communities across Nigeria, they are surrounded by bush paths, isolated routes, and limited security presence, conditions that can make coordinated attacks easier to execute and harder to repel.

Femi’s daughter was among the children abducted
Classes left deserted after attack at LA primary school, Esin-Ele

On the day of the Oyo abduction, another school attack in Borno State, Northeast Nigeria, saw armed men abduct scores of children from schools, underscoring how schoolchildren continue to remain easy targets in Nigeria’s worsening security crisis.

Before then, terrorists had, in November 2025, stormed St. Mary’s Private Catholic Primary and Secondary School at Papiri in Niger State, abducting 253 students and 12 staff members in one of the state’s largest school kidnappings in recent years.

The first school abduction that attracted global outrage occurred in April 2014, when Boko Haram kidnapped 276 schoolgirls from Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State. Although some later escaped or were released, several remain unaccounted for, and the attack became a defining symbol of Nigeria’s inability to protect schoolchildren.

Since then, the attacks have continued in waves. In February 2018, Boko Haram abducted 110 schoolgirls from Government Girls Science and Technical College in Dapchi, Yobe State, an attack that left at least five students dead. In December 2020, armed men stormed Government Science Secondary School in Kankara, Katsina State, taking more than 300 boys. The following year, more than 300 schoolgirls were abducted in Jangebe, Zamfara State, while Kaduna recorded multiple school kidnappings, including attacks on the Federal College of Forestry Mechanisation in Afaka, Greenfield University, and Bethel Baptist High School.

In March 2024, about 287 pupils were kidnapped from Kuriga in Kaduna State, reigniting national outrage over school insecurity among several other instances.

Timeline of school abduction

In response to repeated attacks, the Nigerian government launched the Safe Schools Initiative (SSI) in 2014, designed to strengthen security around vulnerable schools, particularly in high-risk regions. Not less than $30 million was spent over the years to school protection programmes, emergency response systems, and broader education security interventions.

Speaking with The ICIR, an Abuja-based education researcher and consultant, Isiaq Oluwatosin, said one of the major reasons school abductions persist is the country’s failure to adapt its school security systems to modern threats.

According to him, many public schools across Nigeria’s rural communities like Esin Ele and Yawota, still operate in physically vulnerable settings with little or no security infrastructure.

“Most schools are still in open fields like they were under colonialism,” he said. “Most are not fenced and lack adequate security architecture.”

He argued that the focus of security should not merely be on responding after attacks occur, but on preventing them through proactive intelligence gathering and threat disruption.

Oluwatosin said the consequences of school abductions stretch far beyond the immediate victims, leaving lasting psychological scars on teachers, pupils, and entire communities.

“Only those children can truly tell what they witnessed. We can only imagine and still not come close to the horrors they may be facing in the hands of total strangers,” he said.

He noted that teachers are also deeply affected, having to grapple with the trauma of seeing children they interact with almost daily suddenly disappear in violent circumstances.

“As a teacher, you become a parent to those students as well. How do you return to teaching when children you saw five times a week are suddenly gone, not because of a holiday, but because of kidnappings? It is a long road to recovery.”

He warned that repeated attacks on schools could worsen Nigeria’s already severe education crisis, especially with the country’s growing population and millions of out-of-school children.

On solutions, he stressed the need for stronger collaboration between communities and security agencies, expanded intelligence gathering, and the urgent strengthening of school protection infrastructure. According to the educationist, “Government must be intentional about its responsibility because security is one of the core reasons people pledge allegiance to the state. Once that trust is broken, dangerous alternatives begin to emerge.”

Government intensifies rescue efforts

Following the attack and the widespread fear it triggered across affected communities, the Oyo State government ordered the temporary closure of primary schools in neighbouring local government areas, including Surulere, Oyo East, Oriire, and Olorunsogo, as a precautionary measure to prevent further attacks and allow security agencies to stabilise the area.

Governor Seyi Makinde also assured residents that the government was committed to securing the safe return of the abducted pupils and teachers, even as the crisis took a darker turn with the reported killing of one of the kidnapped teachers.

Addressing journalists after an emergency security meeting on Sunday, May 18, Makinde described the incident as deeply troubling and appealed for calm, saying authorities were deploying both kinetic and non-kinetic measures in response to the abduction.

He also appealed to community leaders, residents, and religious stakeholders, particularly the Baptist Convention linked to one of the affected schools, to support efforts aimed at securing the victims’ release.

When contacted, Suleman Olanrewaju, the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor refused to comment on the incident and directed this reporter to the Police.

The ICIR visited the Ikoyi Ile Divisional Police Command in Oriire Local Government Area but was directed to the Oyo State Police Command. When contacted, the spokesperson of the command, Olushola Ayanlade said efforts were on in collaboration with other security agencies to ensure the safe return of the children and arrest of the perpetrators.

He, however, did not provide further response, as of the time of filing this report.

At the federal level, President Bola Tinubu condemned the killing of the abducted teacher, describing the attack as barbaric while expressing sympathy to the affected families and the Oyo State government.

In a statement by the Presidency, Tinubu said security agencies had been directed to intensify rescue operations and ensure the safe return of all remaining victims.

The president also renewed his call for the establishment of state police, arguing that the persistence of kidnapping and violent attacks across parts of the country had reinforced the need for decentralised policing.

“The IGP, following my instructions, is personally leading the tech-driven operation. We expect a breakthrough soon. The bandits and all their local collaborators will be fished out and made to face the full wrath of the law,” the president said.

For the families in Yawota and Esin Ele, however, the promises offer little immediate comfort. As rescue efforts continue, many remain hold onto hope that the children taken from their classrooms will return home alive.

Mass atrocities worsen as Nigeria records over 30,000 deaths in 6 years

RECENT school attacks in Borno and Oyo states have left Nigerians grappling with the troubling pattern and spread of insecurity in the country. 

In Borno state, gunmen stormed Government Day Junior Secondary School in Askira-Uba Local Government Area, abducting dozens of pupils on May 15, 2026. On the same day, three schools in Orire LGA, of Oyo State were attacked with dozens of pupils and teachers abducted, spreading fear to the South-West.

These incidents revive memories of past mass abductions such as the Chibok and Dapchi kidnappings in the North East that plunged Nigeria’s security challenges into global consciousness and drew international outrage.

Occurring a few days before the National Day of Mourning and Remembrance, these incidents highlight a surge in mass atrocities committed against Nigerians. Data mined by the ICIR, reveal that these atrocities have persisted for six years, shrinking safety in communities, markets, schools and other public spaces.

32,667 killed, 23,187 kidnapped in six years

According to figures obtained from Mass Atrocities Tracker, no fewer than 32,667 people were killed across Nigeria between 2021 and 2026. This translates to an average of about 15 deaths per day over the six-year period. 

The figures, compiled from incidents linked to insurgency, banditry, activities of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and communal violence, show the spread in killings and abductions across different parts of the country despite repeated military operations and government assurances.

Based on the data, 6,895 were killed in 2021, at a time when several communities in Zamfara and Kaduna faced repeated mass raids by armed groups, with entire villages ransacked and residents either killed or forced to flee.

In 2022, about 5,792 deaths were recorded. The ICIR gathered that during this period, bandit attacks and communal clashes intensified across parts of the North-West and North-Central, with communities in Plateau and Benue continuing to report killings in farming settlements.

Further breakdown of the data shows that at least 4,416 people were killed in 2023 while, in 2024, deaths rose again to 5,353, with renewed attacks in Borno and continued violence in the North-West. School attacks, village raids and highway ambushes again became more frequent.

In 2025, at least 6,518 people were killed. The year saw renewed insurgent attacks in the North-East and sustained bandit violence in Zamfara, where entire communities were again forced to abandon their homes after repeated assaults. The latest data shows that between January-April, 2026, at least 3,693 people have been killed.

Top 5 states with highest killings 

Further breakdown shows that Borno recorded the highest number of deaths with 5,706 victims between 2021 and 2026. This is followed by Zamfara which recorded 4,396 deaths within the same period. Benue recorded 2,948 deaths making it the third most hit state. It was closely followed by Kaduna which 2,851 deaths and Plateau with 2,471 deaths within the period under review.

Other states in the ranking include Katsina with 2,144 deaths, Niger with 2,135 deaths and Sokoto with 903 killed.  Tarawa recorded 823, and Kebbi, 800 killed in the last six years.

Why Borno leads as epicentre of killings

In Borno, the state’s long-running insurgency crisis has made it the main theatre of operations for Boko Haram and its breakaway faction, ISWAP (Islamic State West Africa Province). Boko Haram emerged around 2009 as an armed Islamist insurgent group in north-eastern Nigeria, launching attacks on police stations, military bases, schools, places of worship and civilian communities. The group’s campaign of violence escalated sharply after 2011, leading to mass displacement and the destruction of entire towns.

In 2016, the group split, leading to the emergence of ISWAP, which aligned itself with the Islamic State network. Since then, both groups have operated in different parts of the Lake Chad basin, with ISWAP becoming more dominant in some areas due to its more structured operations and control over territories around the Lake Chad axis.

Over the years, both groups have carried out repeated raids on rural communities, often targeting farming villages, highways, military outposts and internally displaced persons’ routes. These attacks have forced many residents in Borno to flee their homes, with thousands still living in camps or host communities years after displacement.

Nigeria’s security crises since 2021

Banditry pushes Zamfara to the brink 

The crisis in Zamfara is largely driven by armed bandit groups operating across forested areas that stretch into neighbouring Katsina, Sokoto, Kaduna and Niger states. These groups have evolved over the years from loosely organised criminal gangs into more structured networks carrying out coordinated attacks on rural communities.

Communities across Zamfara have also reported a disturbing system of imposed levies, where residents are forced to pay “taxes” or risk renewed attacks. In some areas, bandits have taken over mining fields and entire villages have been emptied after repeated raids, with survivors fleeing into nearby towns or internally displaced camps.

At different points in the crisis, some local communities entered negotiated peace deals with armed groups, but these arrangements have often collapsed, leading to fresh waves of violence. Many rural settlements remain deserted, with farms abandoned and livelihoods disrupted, as residents live with the fear of returning to areas where attacks often happen without warning.

Benue, Kaduna, Plateau hit hard

Benue was the third most hit state with much of the killings linked to recurring clashes between farming communities and armed herders, as well as wider communal violence in rural areas. For years, villages in the state have face attacks during farming seasons and entire communities displaced. In 2025, The ICIR reported how several villages in Benue were caught in a deadly cycle of violence.

Kaduna, with a long history of sectarian violence follows closely behind Benue recording high fatalities in the last six years. The state has within this period faced multiple security challenges that include bandit raids, to farmer herder crisis and communal conflicts.

The death toll from Plateau State is largely driven by long-standing tensions between farming and herding communities that have repeatedly escalated into deadly attacks on villages, often leaving dozens dead in single incidents. Plateau is also confronted by ethno-religious tensions in Jos and some major cities that often lead to road blocade and killings.   

Kidnappings spread across states

The data shows that kidnapping remains one of the most widespread crimes across Nigeria. At least 23,187 people were kidnapped in the last six years. The data shows that in 2021, at least 5,663 people were abducted and 5,162 abducted the following year. In 2023, the crime dropped to 2,653 but picked up to 5,171 in 2024. In 2025, records on kidnapping dropped again to 3,033. However, data records from January to April reveal at least 1,505 abduction cases. Many of the victims include farmers, traders and schoolchildren. In states like Zamfara, Kaduna and Niger, abductions often occur in waves, with entire communities negotiating ransoms to secure the release of captives.

Zamfara, Kaduna top kidnapping list

The North west remains the focal point of Nigeria’s banditry and records more kidnapping incidents than any other region. Zamfara leads with 5,676 kidnapped victims between 2021 and 2026. The ICIR reports that the state has become one of the main corridors of abduction in the North-West, where armed groups popularly called bandits routinely raid villages, block rural roads and seize residents for ransom.

Kaduna follows with 4,394 kidnapping cases. Many of the victims are schoolchildren, commuters and farmers taken during attacks on villages or ambushes along highways.

Niger recorded 3,597 kidnappings within the period, with attacks concentrated in rural communities and travel routes linking the North-West to the Federal Capital Territory and Kwara state.

Similarly, Katsina recorded 2,079 kidnappings, making it the fourth on the list of states with the highest kidnapping incidents.

Other affected states include Sokoto, Borno, Kebbi and Taraba, where similar patterns of rural attacks and ransom-driven abductions have persisted over the years.

Expert query government on rising killings 

The Co-Chair of the Community of Practice Against Mass Atrocities in Nigeria, Ken Henshaw, while speaking at a conflict-specific dialogue marking the 2026 National Day of Mourning, said the continued rise in mass killings and abductions reflects a clear failure of government to meet its constitutional responsibility of protecting lives and property.

Henshaw said Nigeria’s insecurity crises, which has persisted across multiple administrations, shows that security institutions have consistently performed below expectation despite repeated promises and military operations aimed at curbing violence.

According to him, data tracking mass atrocities in the country indicates sustained levels of killings and kidnappings over the past several years, arguing that the figures point to systemic failure rather than isolated security lapses.

Henshaw said the persistence of attacks across different regions, coupled with rising casualty figures, suggests that existing security strategies have not been effective in addressing the scale and spread of violence.

“The violence continues to be driven by multiple armed actors operating across different regions of the country, including insurgent groups, armed bandits, separatist militias and communal armed groups, resulting in widespread displacement, destruction of livelihoods and growing civilian vulnerability,” he said.

The activist also criticised the increasing resort to amnesty programmes for armed groups, arguing that such measures weaken law enforcement and reduce pressure on authorities to prosecute offenders.

He further noted that the security architecture remains overstretched and under-resourced, saying that police deployment priorities, including the diversion of personnel to VIP protection, have affected public safety outcomes.

Presidency threatens legal action against VDM over alleged Tinubu audio

THE Presidency has threatened legal action against popular social media commentator Martins Otse, also known VeryDarkMan (VDM), over alleged circulation of an AI-generated audio he attributed to President Bola Tinubu.

The president’s Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, issued the warning on Wednesday in reaction to a video in which VDM played the audio and asked followers to judge its authenticity.

“This VDM needs to face the weight of the law for being the conveyor and disseminator of a fake audio of President Tinubu. This is a clear case of an egregious abuse of the social media platform,” he wrote.

Onanuga’s reaction followed a quote-retweet of a post by an X user identified as Aneex, who criticised the video and accused VDM of exploiting emotions for political propaganda.

In the video VDM posted, he urged his followers in a mix of Pidgin English and English to judge the authenticity of the audio for themselves.

“You people watch it, see this next video I’m about to play. After you people watch it, we’ll come decide whether na for shrine them cook una mind. All the people wey wan support Bola Ahmed Tinubu for 2027, you go come know whether they don cook your mind,” VDM said.

The audio allegedly featured Tinubu’s voice making controversial remarks, including claims that insecurity in the South-East was deliberate, that he had asked Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi to step down for him in 2022, that he was unconcerned about Nigerians’ hardship, and that World Bank loans were being used to finance elections.

“This man does not have anything to offer. Come 2027, any other option is welcome. But for me, myself and I, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu cannot offer us anything anymore. So, he should go,” after playing the audio, VDM added.

However, checks by The ICIR shows VDM questioning the credibility of the video shared by Bolaji Fesomade on X.

“You will soon tell the world where you saw that video and how you guy edit it,” VDM wrote in reaction to the video.