Oyo Abduction: Five weeks on, Ibadan bishops raise concern over Oriire victims’ welfare

The Catholic bishops of Ibadan ecclesiastical province have expressed worries over the living conditions of the Oriire abductees, five weeks after the abduction.
The bishops, in a statement released in Ibadan on Monday by the president, Gabriel Abegunrin and the secretary, Anselm Lawani, demanded their immediate and unconditional release.
They declared that the abductees had lived long enough under the harshest conditions, without shelter, for the government to act.
The ecclesiastical province comprises the Ibadan Archdiocese and the Ondo, Ilorin, Oyo, Ekiti, and Osogbo dioceses.
Gunmen invaded three public schools in the Oriire Local Government Area of Oyo State on May 15, leaving an assistant head teacher and a commercial motorcyclist dead.
They worried that the abductees had no good nutrition, were completely exposed to the elements in the forest, and were in the hands of the most vicious and merciless criminals.
The bishops described the murder of a teacher, a motorcycle rider and the beheading of another teacher in the forest as a barbaric assassination of culture and erasure of decency.
“This should have absolutely no place in Nigeria and particularly among the Yoruba people.
“The incident violated the sanity and innocence of the Nigerian South-West, which is well-known for its passion for education,” the bishops said.
They also said that the abduction and the killings had turned the simple life of the Esiele community into a long and sorrowful nightmare.
While noting the barrage of reassurances, speeches and visits by the federal and state governments, they said that the nation’s security could still be improved.
“Despite all these, Nigerians seem no further than where they were ten years ago with security of lives and property,” they stated.
They highlighted the scale of insecurity and how violent kidnapping in farmlands and villages appears to be normal news.
They also expressed concern that policemen and soldiers were attacked and murdered.
The bishops said they could no longer keep quiet over the excruciating wait, the painful lament, and the unspeakable suffering inflicted on families of the 46 abductees.
“We condemn this gross assault on the sanctity of human life and social order and are outraged by the seeming inability of our governments to prevent its frequent occurrence,” they said.
Drawing parallels with Chibok, the bishops pleaded with the Oyo State government that the Esiele abductees should not suffer the same fate.
“Gov. Makinde should act now lest the present debacle dim the glory of his past exploits.
“We also appeal to the federal government and National Assembly to fast-track the processes of approving State Police, and put policy and legislation in place to prevent its misapplication,” the bishops said.
The ecclesiastical province called for decisive policing of forests, an enhanced intelligence gathering, equipping grassroots communities to defend themselves, and the adoption of technology to enhance security.
They condemned the ongoing reintegration of “so-called ‘repentant bandits’ into security agencies and society, while treating victims of crime and their relatives with neglect or outright disdain.
According to them, it rubs dirt on the face of justice and is a strand of the corruption that has bedevilled the social contract.
The bishops demanded that bandits and kidnappers be made to face the full force of the law firmly and swiftly, lest others be encouraged to take up arms against the State.
They urged Nigerians to be law-abiding, vigilant, and to always pray for the victims and security agents.
“Nigeria belongs to all of us, and no innocent soul should be made to suffer violence, oppression or marginalisation while the government at any level looks on as if helpless and overwhelmed,” the bishops said.
(NAN)
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