Heavy security at Aso Rock ahead of Sowore’s planned protest

Juliet Anine
3 Min Read

 

Security presence was reinforced around the access routes to the Aso Rock Presidential Villa in Abuja on Thursday, with anti-riot policemen cordoning the main gates of the State House according to The PUNCH.

The security beef-up follows a planned march to the Villa by human rights activist and African Action Congress presidential candidate Omoyele Sowore, who declared that he would lead protesters to Aso Rock if the abducted schoolchildren from Oyo and Borno states were not rescued.

There is heavy deployment of anti-riot police at the Villa’s main entrance, with officers in full riot gear forming a cordon around the gates. Access to the premises remained restricted to persons with State House identification tags, with security personnel turning back others who attempted to approach.

Sowore announced on Wednesday that the leadership of the AAC and its affiliated Take It Back Movement would march from Eagle Square in Abuja to the Presidential Villa beginning at 8:00 a.m. on Thursday, June 4, under the hashtag #OccupyAsoRock.

He said participants would demand the immediate release of school children and other victims kidnapped across Nigeria, and called on President Tinubu to ensure the safe return of the abducted children or resign from office for failing in the fundamental duty of protecting lives and security.

“You cannot claim to be president of Nigeria and then refuse to do the job of the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. We are not here to beg anybody,” Sowore had said during a protest earlier in the week.

“We are just asking people who claim they are elected to protect Nigerians to do their work. It would have been great if the number of policemen preventing this march could instead protect our schools.”

He also challenged security agents protecting politicians, saying, “Your children are also in schools. If the school becomes a ground for kidnapping, one day your children too will be kidnapped.”

The planned march is directed at the government’s response to the May 15, 2026, abductions of approximately 39 students and seven teachers across three schools in Oriire Local Government Area of Oyo State. A second abduction involving 42 pupils from Mussa Primary and Junior Secondary School in Askira-Uba, Borno State, occurred on the same day.

The federal government on Sunday dispatched a high-powered delegation led by Chief of Staff Femi Gbajabiamila to the affected Oyo communities, during which President Tinubu approved the recruitment of 1,000 forest guards and the deployment of a specialised rescue unit. The Nigeria Union of Teachers declared an indefinite strike in Oyo State beginning June 1, with schools shut across the state.

Share This Article