Nigeria rescues schoolchildren, teachers abducted in Oyo, presidency says


FILE PHOTO: An empty street in the Esinle community, where pupils and teachers were abducted in a large-scale school attack, in Oyo State, Nigeria, June 2, 2026. REUTERS/Sodiq Adelakun/File Photo

LAGOS, July 10 (Reuters) - ⁠At least 39 schoolchildren and six ⁠teachers kidnapped by gunmen in Nigeria's southwestern ‌Oyo state nearly two months ago have been rescued by security forces, a presidential spokesperson said on Friday.

• ​The students and teachers were ⁠abducted on May 15 ⁠when armed men targeted multiple schools in Oyo's ⁠Oriire ‌district.

• Oyo officials had said one of the abducted teachers was killed ⁠in captivity.

• In a statement, presidentialspokesperson ​Bayo Onanuga ‌said eight kidnappers were arrested and are ⁠in custody.

• ​The statement quoted President Bola Tinubu saying his government "will get justice for these children and ⁠their teachers" and the family of ​the teacher "who the terrorists gruesomely murdered."

• Mass kidnappings by armed groups have become a major ⁠security challenge in Nigeria in recent years, with criminal gangs exploiting weak security and porous borders to target travelers, students and rural communities ​for cash and in-kind ⁠payments.

• Schools are often targeted, although such attacks ​are less frequent in ‌the southwest of the country.

(Reporting ​by Ahmed Kingimi in Maiduguri, Writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe, Editing by Deepa Babington)

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