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Fear Grips Travelers As Kidnappers Kill GUO Driver, Abduct 16 Passengers On  Benin–Ore Road 

Commuters plying the Benin–Ore Road witnessed a nasty experience after suspected kidnappers ambushed a commercial bus allegedly belonging to GUO Transport, killed the driver, and abducted about 16 passengers, leaving behind a chilling scene of chaos.

P.M.EXPRESS reports that the incident happened on 20th April, 2026, as the  bus, said to have departed Lagos en route the eastern part of the country, was discovered abandoned by the roadside.

Its doors hung wide open while the silence around it felt unnatural — broken only by the distant rustle of bushes. The inside of the bus was stained with blood believed to be that of the driver, who was shot dead while attempting to turn back to save the passengers inside the bus.

The viral videos now circulating online captured the aftermath: bags ripped open and tossed across the asphalt, sandals without owners, phones still lit on the ground, and an empty vehicle that looked like its occupants had vanished into thin air. The images have deepened public dread of a mass abduction.

Witnesses who stumbled  on the scene spoke in hush tones, glancing over their shoulders as they recounted what they were told.

Armed men, they said, emerged from the thick foliage flanking the highway and swarmed the bus with terrifying speed, barking orders before herding passengers into the bush.

According to accounts from individuals at the scene, the attack was over in minutes. There was no time to scream for help, no time to run. The assailants moved with a practiced, ruthless efficiency that left those who heard the story feeling exposed and vulnerable.

 An unverified claim now fueling public anger suggests that some soldiers were sighted near the area when the incident unfolded but did not intervene. The thought that uniformed personnel might have been close yet unable — or unwilling — to act has sent a fresh wave of anxiety through waiting families.

The stretch of road where the bus was found has long been whispered about by drivers. Cloaked in dense vegetation and swallowed by darkness after sundown, it is a place many now avoid if they can. Each bend feels like a blind spot; each shadow, a possible threat.

“This is not the first time something like this is happening here,” a social media user wrote, the words echoing the fears of thousands. “People are no longer safe travelling on this road, especially in the evening. You leave home praying you return.”

As at press time, an uneasy silence hangs over the incident. There has been no confirmed rescue operations, no sightings of the missing passengers, and no official statements from security agencies. The lack of information is feeding the worst kind of fear — the fear of the unknown.

The Police are yet to provide details on how many passengers were on board or what steps, if any, are being taken to track them.

 GUO Transport Company, believed to be linked to the abandoned bus, has also not issued any formal response, leaving relatives to refresh news pages in desperate anticipation.

The incident has tightened the knot of insecurity already strangling Nigeria’s highways. Across social media and motor parks, travelers are asking the same question in low voices: Who is next? Many are now calling for better lighting, constant patrols, and the clearing of thick bushes that give criminals cover.