Oyo Government Denies Reports Of Teacher Beaten To Death By Students In Ogbomoso

The Oyo State Ministry of Education and the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) have dismissed reports alleging that a teacher in Ogbomoso was beaten to death by students, describing the viral story as false and grossly misleading. Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology, Olusegun Olayiwola; Oyo NUT Chairman, Comrade Raji Oladimeji; and the Principal of Soun High School, Ogbomoso, Mr. Ajayi Adeyinka, addressed the matter on Monday, clarifying what truly transpired. According to them, the late teacher, Mr. Adegoke Abiodun, was not assaulted by students as claimed online. They explained that the only incident involving him and some students occurred on May 28, 2025, when he caught four students gambling on school premises. Olayiwola said findings from the Ministry’s investigation revealed that while trying to discipline one of the students, Mr. Adegoke accidentally dislocated his arm. He later sought treatment from a local bone therapist and a private hospital, where doctors eventually diagnosed him with stage 4 bone marrow cancer. He passed away on November 4, 2025. The commissioner cautioned journalists and residents against spreading unverified reports, stressing the importance of fact-checking before publication. The state government and the education community in Oyo expressed condolences to the late teacher’s family, praying for his peaceful rest while urging the public to disregard the misleading narrative circulating online.

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Young Abuja Teacher Sentenced to Life Imprisonment for Raping 9-Year-Old Pupil

Nigeria’s fight against child sexual abuse gained momentum on October 29, 2025, when the Federal Capital Territory High Court in Abuja condemned 19-year-old teacher Abdullahi Abbass to life behind bars for the anal rape of his nine-year-old male pupil. The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) welcomed the decision as a “landmark judgment,” hailing it as a beacon of hope for survivors and a fierce deterrent for predators. Under Justice M. Osho-Adebiyi’s gavel, the court exposed the depths of Abbass’s betrayal. As the boy’s class teacher at a private school in the Kwali Area Council, he weaponized trust on March 19, 2025. After classes ended, Abbass dispatched another student to retrieve the child from home, only to drag him to a shadowed street for the unspeakable assault. In a testament to resilience, the young victim wasted no time in revealing his ordeal to his mother, igniting a chain of events that led to Abbass’s arrest and trial on charges of rape and sexual abuse. The conviction invoked Section 2 of the Violence Against Persons (Prohibition) Act, 2015, enforcing the maximum penalty of life imprisonment and reinforcing the law’s unyielding shield for the innocent.NAPTIP’s Director-General, Binta Adamu Bello, spotlighted the verdict’s ripple effects, applauding the seamless teamwork with the Nigerian Police and judicial partners. “This fitting retribution will echo through our Sex Offenders Register, warding off would-be violators,” she asserted. Bello spotlighted the expedited probe as proof of NAPTIP’s redoubled zeal in dismantling networks of domestic violence, rape, and sexual predation nationwide, vowing an unrelenting push for justice everywhere.Grim Parallel: 12-Year Sentence for Seminary Teacher in Anambra Defilement CaseThe Abuja ruling casts a harsh light on a pervasive scourge, mirrored in Anambra State’s recent reckoning. On June 19, 2025, a Sexual and Gender-Based Violence Court in Awka imprisoned 34-year-old teacher Pascal Ofomata for 12 years after he defiled his 11-year-old male JSS 1 pupil at St. Christopher’s Junior Seminary in Onitsha. Justice Peace Otti, presiding, held Ofomata accountable under Sections 3(1) and 4(1) of the Violence Against Persons Act for rape and bodily harm. As these verdicts unfold against a backdrop of escalating child safety alarms, they affirm the courts’ hardening resolve to uproot abuse from educational sanctuaries. On November 2, 2025, activists implore bolstered school oversight, trauma-informed resources for victims, and societal awakening to safeguard tomorrow’s guardians from yesterday’s monsters.

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