Protesters are demanding an end to insecurity/Lionscrib
As Nigeria marked 2026 Democracy Day on June 12, frustrated citizens abandoned festivities and flooded the streets, confronting a government they say has failed them on security, on governance, and on the 46 souls still held captive in Oyo State for nearly a month with no rescue in sight.
Nigerians took to the streets across multiple cities including Abuja and Lagos State on Democracy Day 2026, demanding an end to insecurity and poor governance with pressure intensifying on President Bola Tinubu to secure the release of 39 students and 7 teachers abducted in Oyo State.
Coordinated protests erupted in several Nigerian cities during what was meant to be a day of national celebration, as civil society groups and activists channelled public anger over rising insecurity and economic hardship into mass demonstrations.
Led by prominent figures including presidential candidate Omoyele Sowore and activist Very Dark Man, the protesters peacefully demanded that the federal government fix Nigeria’s deepening security crisis and rescue the victims kidnapped in Orire Local Government Area of Oyo State on May 15, 2026, nearly a month after the abduction.
Despite weeks of government assurances, no rescue has been achieved. The kidnappers have continued to release footage of the captives, fuelling public outrage and deepening mistrust of the government’s capacity to respond.
Related: Protesters March In Abuja Over School Kidnappings
Though the demonstrations remained peaceful, security agencies responded with force, deploying teargas against the protesters.
Sowore was among those affected, with viral videos showing him collapsed on the ground after reportedly being struck by teargas canisters.
The clampdown drew sharp criticism, coming hours after President Tinubu used his Democracy Day address to call for national unity and warned perpetrators of insecurity to surrender or face consequences.
Insecurity has plagued Nigeria for over a decade, claiming thousands of lives and destroying livelihoods.
Citizens are increasingly questioning whether the government retains the will or the capacity to end the crisis.
“Nobody knows who is next,” Favour Beneth, an Abuja resident, told Lionscrib.
“We are protesting because we want insecurity to end and we demand good governance.”

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