Oyo School Abduction: Tinubu Promises Rescue of Children in Captivity

The President told the children in captivity that the government has neither abandoned nor forgotten them as directives have been issued to the security agencies for their safe rescue

President Bola Tinubu has assured Nigerians grieving for their abducted children that his administration has intensified rescue operations, stronger school protections, and comprehensive care for survivors.

The President told the children in captivity that the government has neither abandoned nor forgotten them as directives have been issued to the security agencies for their safe rescue.

The pledge was contained in his message on the 2026 Children’s Day celebration.

“As a father and your President: you are not forgotten. You are not abandoned,” Mr. Tinubu said, speaking directly to children, parents and teachers still held in captivity in Oyo, Borno and other affected states.

He acknowledged the national pain: “Some children have been forced into fear. Some parents cannot join today’s celebration because their hearts are set on one prayer: ‘Bring our children home.’”

With the Children’s Day theme, “Future Now: Promoting Inclusion for Every Nigerian Child,” as his backdrop, the president framed the crisis as both a moral failure and an urgent security priority.

“To the families grieving and despondent, your government will not turn your pain into ceremony. We will continue to work until children taken from their homes, schools and communities are returned safely, and until those who profit from this cruelty are brought to justice,” he declared.

President Tinubu ordered all relevant security agencies to “sustain and intensify coordinated rescue operations” that are intelligence-led and focused on recovering children safely.

He also directed urgent improvements in school protection across high-risk areas, including updated vulnerability mapping, tighter coordination between state governments and security commands, rapid response links between schools and local security units, and stronger community-based early warning systems.

“The Federal Ministry of Education, working with state governments, is to deepen the implementation of the Safe Schools framework with clear reporting, clear responsibility and clear timelines,” the president said, insisting that “every school in a vulnerable area must know who to call, what to do, where to move, and how to protect children when danger is identified.”

He emphasized that rescue is only the beginning of the state’s duty. “A child who returns from trauma must return to care, medical attention, counselling, education and dignity,” he stressed, ordering ministries and agencies to ensure recovered children receive “proper reintegration support, not temporary attention.”

The president warned that protecting children cannot be left to government alone.

According to him, “parents, teachers, traditional rulers, religious leaders, community leaders, youth groups, transport unions, local vigilantes and the media” have vital roles to play and are essential to prevention and response.

He added a blunt reminder about communal responsibility: “When a community sees strange movement around a school and keeps quiet, a child is placed at risk. When warning signs are ignored, families suffer.”

On the wider promise for Nigeria’s children, Tinubu painted a forward-looking agenda: “My administration remains committed to a Nigeria where every child can learn safely, grow in good health, eat well, access opportunity and dream without fear. We are investing in education, health care, nutrition, social protection, digital skills and safer communities because childhood must not be a privilege reserved for a few.”

The President in his message further added: “To our children, you matter—your dreams matter; your safety matters. Your education matters. Be assured that your future matters to this government and to this nation, and we will safeguard it.”

 

Metrowatchxtra

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