Under the cover of a moonless night, the terrorists returned. While Nigeria slept, armed gangs stormed St. Mary’s School in Niger State, pulling students and staff from their beds in a brutal, calculated mass abduction that exposes the nation’s security forces not just as incompetent, but as passive spectators in a war they have already lost.
This is a systematic collapse. The attack on St. Mary’s is the second mass school kidnapping in a week, following the abduction of 25 students in Kebbi State. It unfolds against a backdrop of sheer governmental paralysis: over 50 schools in Kwara State have been shuttered in pre-emptive surrender to bandits, effectively ceding control of entire regions to terrorists.

Local official Ahmed Abdullahi Rofia could only confirm the bare facts—a raid between 2:00 and 3:00 a.m., the number of victims unknown. The silence from the Niger State Police Command is deafening, their promise to “provide details later” a pathetic epitaph for a nation’s failing security.
The official response is a broken record of empty gestures. President Bola Tinubu cancels foreign trips to “coordinate a response,” a hollow performance that has yet to translate into a single prevented attack. There is no coordinated response, only a recurring cycle of tragedy, condemnation, and forgotten promises. The terrorists, meanwhile, operate with impunity, their confidence growing with each successful raid on what should be the most protected spaces in society—the nation’s schools.
Why It Matters
The phrase “another school, another mass abduction” should be a rallying cry for revolution, but in Nigeria, it has become a mundane headline, a testament to a population being conditioned to accept its own destruction. The security apparatus is not merely worthless; it is a multi-billion-naira fraud perpetrated on the Nigerian people, a hollowed-out institution that provides salaries for generals but not safety for children.
Let’s be brutally honest: the Nigerian state is no longer capable of protecting its citizens. The pre-emptive closure of dozens of schools is the white flag of surrender. It is an official admission that the government has lost its monopoly on violence and has abandoned its children to the mercy of sadists and criminals.
The terrorists are not just kidnapping students; they are systematically dismantling the future of Africa’s most populous nation, and the government, through its criminal negligence and breathtaking incompetence, is their chief accomplice. When a nation cannot protect its children in their classrooms, it has ceased to be a functioning state. What we are witnessing is the unraveling of a nation.
















