October 4, 2025

Society Watch

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Inside bandit bloody attack that emptied Kwara community

On Sunday, September 28, residents of Oke-Ode, a quiet agrarian town in Ifelodun Local Government Area of Kwara State, woke up to the staccato of gunfire.

 

What followed was not just another bandit attack, it was a massacre that shattered the town’s soul.

 

When the smoke cleared, no fewer than 15 people were confirmed dead— hunters, vigilantes, traders, a traditional leader and young men who had been the community’s first line of defence.

 

Families were kidnapped, entire compounds emptied, and hundreds of residents fled in panic.

 

They abandoned farmlands, shops, and schools.

 

Oke-Ode, once considered the safest town in the Igbomina axis, is now deserted.

 

Markets that once buzzed with traders are silent, sachet water sellers have disappeared.

 

Fear is now the only currency that circulates in the town.

 

Some of those who died in the incident were identified as the Baale of Ogba Ayo, Abdulwasiu Abdulkareem; his brother, Fatai Abdulkareem; a prince from Agunjin, Ishola Muhammed; and Abdulfatai Elemosho from Babaloma.

 

Others are Salaudeen Bashir from Babaloma; Saheed from Abayan; Olowo-Ila from Oke-Ode, Oluode Ologomo, Oji and Saheed Matubi.

 

We gave the attackers fire for fire – Hunter

 

Amid the grief, survivors pointed to what they described as a suspicious security lapse.

 

It was first a grieving widow who accused men of the Department of State Services of complicity in the attack.

 

She alleged that the operatives disarmed the hunters and gave the guns to the herdsmen.

 

But Rafiu Ajakaye, the Chief Press Secretary to Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, said there was no truth to the claim.

 

He also noted that the leadership of the forest guards had disputed the claim.

 

But a local hunter, who narrowly escaped death and spoke on condition of anonymity, insisted that their guns were taken away before the bandits struck.

 

He also narrated how hunters confronted the hoodlums, who carried sophisticated guns.

 

The hunter said, “It is someone who has not seen a real fight that calls himself a man. It was a tough battle. Those people came with sophisticated weapons. We tried our best, but we were overwhelmed. We gave them fire for fire; the bandits were many.

 

“A military officer had collected most of our guns the previous day, saying he wanted to service them. Immediately, he collected the guns, he kept them in the house with bullets. He slept at Ajase, and maybe it was one of those supplying the guns that hinted them that the guns had been recovered from us, and that they should start coming.

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