Teacher Beheaded in Nigeria as Widespread Muslim Violence Against Christians Escalates Horrifyingly
May 20, 2026

Armed gunmen launched coordinated attacks on multiple schools in the Ahoro-Esinele community of Oriire Local Government Area, Oyo State, southwestern Nigeria, on the night of May 16, 2026, abducting 46 people, including seven teachers and 39 students, from Community High School in Ahoro-Esinele and Yawota Baptist Nursery and Primary School in the nearby Yawota community. The Christian Association of Nigeria in Oyo State confirmed the figure, noting it included children as young as two years old.
One of the abducted teachers, Michael Oyedokun, a mathematics instructor at Community High School, was killed in captivity. A video released on Sunday, May 17, showed him being beheaded. Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde confirmed the killing Monday.
The school’s principal, Mrs. Rachael Folawe Alamu, was among those taken, transported from the scene in her own vehicle before the attackers escaped into a forest reserve. From captivity, she recorded a video message that spread widely on Nigerian social media. She stated the attack began around 9:30 p.m. on Friday and that staff and students had remained in the kidnappers’ hands since.
“I am making this video to ask for help from everyone,” she said, appealing to the federal government, the Oyo State government, the Christian Association of Nigeria, and “all well-meaning Nigerians” to intervene peacefully “so that our lives will not be lost.” Her identity was confirmed by the Oyo State Police Command as Mrs. Rachael Alamu Folawe. She remained in captivity as of the latest available reporting.

The attackers, identified locally as members of the MetroBandits, fled into a forest reserve bordering the community. The name itself reflects a pattern documented across Nigeria, where terms like “bandits” and “unknown gunmen” are routinely applied to groups that analysts say are Islamic terrorists. The progression through those labels, and now, in some cases, quietly to “terrorists,” reflects a sustained struggle over accountability and international perception, with Nigerian agencies consistently resisting the more accurate designations.
The stakes extend beyond terminology. Under U.S. law, terrorism designations govern eligibility for military assistance, intelligence cooperation, counterterrorism funding, and sanctions. Nigeria’s federal government formally designated bandit groups as terrorists in 2022, but the official gazette framing addressed only kidnapping, cattle rustling, and property destruction, stopping short of any acknowledgment of ideological or religious motivation. President Tinubu’s recent vow to defeat “terrorism and banditry” continues that dual framing.
Christian leaders have rejected it. The Christian Association of Nigeria president, Reverend Samson Ayokunle, stated publicly that Nigeria was under siege by groups operating “with a goal to Islamize Nigeria.” The Archbishop of Abuja, Ignatius Kaigama, similarly named “Boko Haram insurgents, herdsmen militia, bandits, and the so-called unknown gunmen” as a unified threat continuing to terrorize the country.
Field testimony has repeatedly challenged the criminal framing. In attacks across Plateau and Benue states, authorities used the bandit designation while eyewitnesses told International Christian Concern the perpetrators were Muslim Fulani militia shouting “Allahu Akbar” before opening fire. One central Nigeria survivor described captives being executed after religious sermons.
“They lined people up and shot them in the head. They preached Islam first,” he said. “We buried 178 bodies in two days.” No ransom was demanded and no cattle taken, a pattern analysts say cannot be reconciled with the bandit label.
Emeka Umeagbalasi of Intersociety attributes at least 60 percent of attacks on Nigerian Christians to extremist Fulani herdsmen or jihadist Fulani fighters, noting that targeted communities are Christian while neighboring Muslim villages are left untouched, and that fewer than one percent of perpetrators are ever arrested.
Patricia Streeter, co-founder of the Anglican Persecuted Church Network, said the evidence is conclusive: “The kidnappings of worshippers during church services make it undeniable this is faith-targeted persecution. It’s also not the result of climate change or banditry, as the mainstream media has said over the years.”
The full list of abducted teachers, published by Sahara Reporters, includes Vice Principal Ojo Jonathan, Olatunde Zacchaeus, John Olaleye, Michael Oyedokun, Mrs. Oladeji, and Mary Akanbi of Yawota Baptist Nursery and Primary School.
A joint rescue operation involving Nigerian soldiers, police, and local vigilantes was disrupted after operatives encountered improvised explosive devices planted by the attackers, wounding several personnel. Six suspects have been arrested, including alleged informants and individuals accused of supplying logistics to the kidnappers. President Bola Tinubu condemned the killing as “barbaric” and said federal authorities were coordinating with state officials and deploying tactical intelligence teams.
A reporter from Objectiv Media described the attackers’ deliberate use of civilians as human shields to slow military operations. “As they permeate into these townships, they take civilians and use them as shields,” the reporter said, explaining that the groups threaten to kill captives if security forces advance. He said the tactic is reinforced through what he called “media sleeper cells,” networks that spread graphic footage to generate fear and cause military commanders to hesitate.
“It is understood that they are doing that to make the military feel weak,” he said. “So the military will be hesitant to approach them further, even though they know the military has closed in on them.”
The family of Michael Oyedokun has asked Nigerians to stop circulating graphic videos of his death, saying the repeated reposting is traumatizing his children, who are currently sitting their exams, as well as elderly relatives and other family members. They asked that only official family photographs be used, or that graphic footage be blurred if shared.
The Oyo State attack is geographically significant. Mass school abductions have historically been concentrated in northern Nigeria, and incidents of this scale are rare in the southwest.
A separate, contemporaneous attack in Borno State saw suspected ISWAP fighters abduct approximately 42 children in Mussa village, Askira-Uba Local Government Area. The separate incident may have contributed to early confusion over casualty figures from Oyo State.

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Author: Antonio Graceffo