By Ibrahim Babangida Lawal
This is not just another news report—it is a desperate cry from mothers who can no longer sleep, fathers who roam the streets at dawn searching for shadows of their missing children, and siblings who clutch empty beds at night praying for a miracle that may never come.
Once a quiet refuge in the Federal Capital Territory, Gwagwalada has become a terrifying hunting ground for soulless predators who rip children from the arms of their families without mercy or remorse. In the space of just seven days, six children each with a name, a laugh, a dream have disappeared as if swallowed by the earth.
Malam Abdullahi Abubakar Aliyu is not just a source in this tragedy, he is an uncle whose home now echoes with silence. His nephews, three bright-eyed children sent on a simple errand behind the local abattoir, met a woman whose face they thought was kind. She was not. She offered them biscuits a currency of betrayal. She sent the eldest child away with money and a smile. When the girl returned, her little siblings were gone. So was the woman. So was any sense of safety.
These children are not statistics; they are sons and daughters, brothers and sisters. They are the hope of mothers who carried them for nine months, the pride of fathers who dream of better days through their eyes. And now, they are missing.
How many more empty beds must we see? How many mothers must fall to their knees in the dirt, begging for the return of tiny hands that will never knock on their doors again?
This madness must stop. We cannot sit in our homes, scrolling past headlines while families crumble. We cannot whisper condolences when we should be shouting for action.
Parents, watch your children as if every stranger could be the one to snatch them away—because they could. Do not let a moment’s distraction cost you a lifetime of regret.
To the authorities: wake up! Patrol these streets. Hunt down these monsters who stalk our children like prey. Bring them to justice without delay or pity.
To the community: speak up. If you see something, say something before another child’s laughter is lost to the dark.
Gwagwalada must not become a graveyard of stolen childhoods. These are not just children, they are our children. And we must protect them with everything we have left.