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Police intensify rescue of Oyo abducted victims as panic spreads

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The Inspector General of Police, Tunji Disu, has deployed more detectives from the Force Headquarters, Abuja, to collaborate with the joint security team as part of intensified efforts to secure the release of the abducted teachers and students of three schools in Oriire Local Government Area of Oyo State.

An informed police source told The PUNCH in Ibadan on Tuesday that the deployment was aimed at rescuing the victims unhurt.

The source said, “More detectives have been deployed from the Force Headquarters to collaborate with the joint security operatives already on the ground.

“The kidnapped students and their teachers will soon breathe the air of freedom as the government and the relevant security agencies are leaving no stone unturned.

“The security agencies will explore all opportunities to ensure that the students return safely to their parents. There is no cause for the parents and the people of the state to be apprehensive as the government is on top of the situation.”

The PUNCH reports that scores of teachers and students of Baptist Nursery and Primary School, Yawota; Community Grammar School; and L.A. Primary School, Esiele, in Oriire Local Government Area of the state were abducted during coordinated attacks on Friday around 9:30am.

Governor Seyi Makinde had earlier confirmed that seven students were abducted from Community Secondary School, while 18 children and seven teachers were kidnapped from First Baptist Primary and Nursery School, adding that one person was killed during the attack.

This came as palpable fear gripped residents of Ogbomoso over an alleged invasion of the town by bandits.

The panic saw parents rush to schools to take their children home, while some schools hurriedly shut down.

There were also rumours that bandits had infiltrated Ladoke Akintola University of Technology.

A resident of Ogbomoso, Kazeem Abdullah, said students and pupils in both public and private primary schools jumped through windows and fled their classrooms and school premises.

“Many parents compounded the problem as they started rushing to their children’s schools to pick them up,” he said.

Reports also emerged from Ajaawa, headquarters of Ogo-Oluwa Local Government Area, that bandits were disrupting peace in the area.

However, the Oyo State Police Command described the alleged infiltration of bandits into Ogbomoso as a false alarm.

The command, in a statement by its Police Public Relations Officer, Olayinka Ayanlade, said the panic stemmed from claims by some students that unfamiliar faces were sighted behind the school fence.

The police said investigations revealed that the individuals were an officer of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps attached to the Kwara State Command, Ilorin, alongside two civilians in a Toyota Venza SUV.

The statement read, “The individuals were questioned and explained that they had merely visited the lady among them in celebration of her birthday.

“During verification and due diligence, relevant NSCDC authorities in Ogbomoso were contacted to confirm the identity and status of the officer involved.

“It was further observed that during the interaction, an altercation reportedly occurred between some teachers and the visitors, which inadvertently heightened suspicion within the school premises.

“Consequently, some students began spreading unverified claims to neighbouring schools and surrounding communities, thereby escalating panic and tension across parts of Ogbomoso and Ajaawa before the actual facts of the incident were established.”

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The command added that it had intensified patrols and visibility policing around the affected communities, while critical stakeholders had been engaged to reassure residents and restore public confidence.

“The area remains peaceful, while normal academic, commercial and social activities have since resumed.

“The command, therefore, warns against the deliberate spread of fake news, misinformation and unverified security reports capable of causing unnecessary panic, heightening tension and undermining public peace,” the statement added.

Similarly, the management of LAUTECH dismissed reports that the institution had been shut over fears of an attack by suspected bandits.

A statement by the institution’s Registrar, Olayinka Balogun, said there was no truth in the rumour circulating about the closure of the university.

Balogun said there was no reason for such action.

The statement read, “This is to strongly debunk the rumour making the rounds that the management of the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, has closed down the university for fear of invasion by bandits.

“This is to inform our students, parents and guardians that there is no reason for management to shut down the university. The institution remains in session.

“As a matter of fact, our students are currently writing their examinations, and the exercise continues on Wednesday. Management regrets any inconvenience this unfounded rumour may have caused.”

Meanwhile, traditional rulers in the five local government areas of Ogbomosoland on Tuesday called for the establishment of a military base in Oriire LGA.

The monarchs said the move would help curb crimes, particularly attacks by armed bandits.

Speaking during the meeting, the Alapa of Apa, Akin Akintola, lamented the worsening insecurity around forest communities in Ogbomoso and adjoining areas.

He said, “We, the traditional rulers, are demanding immediate federal intervention, including the establishment of a military formation close to the forest reserve in Oriire Local Government Area.

“We are requesting that a military base be sited very close to the forest reserve. If we have soldiers and artillery stationed there, it will provide protection for many communities in this zone.”

The monarch stressed that while police officers had been making efforts, the scale and sophistication of the attacks now required military operations.

“I don’t think the police can handle this alone. If you establish only a police station, it may cover just two or three communities. But a military base will offer broader protection and help secure the entire area.

“South-West has now been infiltrated by bandits. We do not have the capacity or the wherewithal to confront these people ourselves. That is why we are appealing to the Federal Government to act urgently,” Akintola added.

The monarchs specifically appealed to President Bola Tinubu, in his capacity as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, to approve the establishment of a military base in the Ogbomoso zone, particularly around Oriire and nearby forest corridors.

“Our people can no longer sleep peacefully. Farmers are afraid to go to their farms because of the fear of attacks and abduction,” the monarch said.

The royal fathers warned that banditry, once associated mainly with parts of northern Nigeria, was gradually spreading into the South-West, creating fear among rural dwellers and threatening agricultural activities.

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“Lives have been lost. Families are in agony, and many victims are still in captivity several days after the incident. The election period is approaching, and many of the people who are supposed to vote have already been displaced by bandits. Without adequate security, they may not even be able to participate in the democratic process,” he added.

OPC offers help

The Oodua People’s Congress also called on South-West governors to authorise and equip local security groups to confront armed gangs operating across the region following the abduction and killing of pupils and teachers in parts of Oyo State.

The OPC President, Wasiu Afolabi, accused political leaders in Yoruba-speaking states of failing to act despite repeated warnings over worsening insecurity.

“The kidnapping, killing and beheading of our defenceless Yoruba kinsmen in Yorubaland is not only condemnable, but it also is highly provocative, and it will not be tolerated,” Afolabi said.

“We hereby urge the government to permit and equip the OPC and other self-determination groups to confront the threat posed by terrorists in order to terminate the insecurity being imported into Yorubaland from the North.”

The organisation said the latest attacks, including the reported abduction of schoolchildren and teachers in the Ogbomoso area, had exposed the vulnerability of rural communities and schools across the South-West.

“Yorubaland is under attack. Long ago, we warned and shouted. But our leaders continued to play politics and refused to act on the matter. Now we must face the reality that the enemies have surrounded us,” Afolabi said.

He argued that insecurity had reached a point where ordinary activities such as farming, travelling and schooling had become dangerous for many residents.

“We will not tolerate a situation where our children cannot safely attend school, where our people cannot travel or where our farmers cannot farm because of some foreign elements.

“The time has come to take the bull by the horns and confront these unprovoked, cold-blooded and needless killings,” he added.

The organisation warned that delays in confronting armed groups operating from forest corridors across the South-West would allow them to expand their influence and entrench criminal networks deeper into local communities.

“OPC wants governors in Yoruba-speaking South-West and beyond to urgently invite all vigilante, hunter and militant groups to join the war against terrorism in Yorubaland.

“Governors must immediately declare a state of emergency and get all hands on board to collaborate with the security forces to restore peace to our native land,” the statement added.

The group renewed calls for the creation of state police structures, arguing that localised security arrangements had become necessary amid growing pressure on federal security agencies.

“We cannot fold our arms anymore and wait for bandits and terrorists to be entering our homes, towns and villages to kidnap and kill at will. Enough is enough.

“The government must rise up, support and equip patriotic and willing individuals and groups like OPC to enter the forests to restore sanity,” Afolabi said.

Igboho battle-ready

Also, activist Sunday Adeyemo, popularly known as Sunday Igboho, said he and others were battle-ready to flush marauders out of forests in the South-West.

“We are battle-ready with our men to storm these forests and flush out marauders who have made life miserable for our people. We cannot continue to fold our hands while our people are being murdered and abducted by bandits, herders and kidnappers,” he said.

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He urged traditional rulers to prevail on government authorities to speedily approve the take-off of the Iru Ekun Security Network to address insecurity in the region.

“I’m only awaiting government approval to tackle the growing insecurity ravaging the South-West head-on,” he added.

PFN condemns abduction

Similarly, the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria said Friday’s incident pointed to a deepening national security crisis and a collapse of government responsibility to protect citizens.

In a statement issued through its media bureau, the PFN National President, Francis Oke, condemned the abduction of schoolchildren and teachers and the killing of Michael Oyedokun.

“The leadership of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria condemns in the strongest terms the abduction of schoolchildren and teachers and the brutal beheading of Mr Michael Oyedokun,” the statement read.

The cleric said the attack on Community High School, Ahoro-Esinele, in Oriire Local Government Area had become another painful symbol of the country’s worsening insecurity, particularly in rural communities and schools.

“Each new incident is an indictment of the Federal Government and exposes the failure of those assurances. Most disgraceful is the continued abduction of pupils across the country. No child should be forced to live in fear,” Oke said.

He added that the safety of the abducted pupils, teachers and staff remained the organisation’s immediate concern.

“Our hearts are bleeding. We watched with horror the video released by the perpetrators, showing our brother, a devoted educator, bound, humiliated and beheaded.

“This is not merely a heinous crime; it is a sacrilege against the sanctity of life, an assault on the teaching vocation and a direct attack on the future of our nation,” the statement added.

The fellowship extended condolences to the family of the slain teacher and the affected community.

“We extend our deepest condolences to Mr Oyedokun’s family, to the bereaved Community High School, and to the people of Oriire Local Government Area. May God comfort them in this hour of unspeakable loss,” the statement read.

The PFN described the attack as a national failure of governance and security.

“That such an atrocity could occur constitutes a national disgrace of the highest order. When armed gangs storm rural schools, kill those who resist and carry away pupils and educators with impunity, the social contract between the state and the citizen is shattered.

“We are past the time for promises. We are tired of promises. What we want are actions that will sweep away insurgency,” Oke stated.

The Christian body said it had repeatedly warned that kidnapping, armed banditry and insurgent violence were spreading across the country and could no longer be treated as isolated regional threats.

“The blood of Mr Oyedokun cries out for justice, not platitudes. For years, PFN warned that insurgency, banditry and kidnapping, if left unchecked, would metastasise across Nigeria. Today, those warnings have come to pass. The same brutality once confined to the North has crossed the Niger,” the statement added.

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Crime

Police hunt kidnappers in Lagos, Ogun forests during Operation Kasoye

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Security operatives from Lagos and Ogun states have launched a joint offensive against criminal networks operating along the border corridor between the two states, leading to the arrest of 88 suspects, the rescue of five kidnapped victims, the recovery of arms and ammunition, and the death of four suspected criminals during encounters with security personnel.

The operation, codenamed Operation Kosaye, a Yoruba phrase meaning “there is no hiding place,” was initiated by the Nigeria Police Force to dismantle kidnapping syndicates, armed robbery gangs and other violent criminal groups exploiting forests and border communities between Lagos and Ogun states as hideouts.

The development followed coordinated operations by the Lagos and Ogun State police commands, with operatives combing forest locations and criminal hideouts along the J3/J4 axis of Ogbere in Ogun State and other identified flashpoints around the two states.

The operation had already yielded significant outcomes, including the rescue of five kidnap victims, the arrest of 88 suspects and the neutralisation of four suspected kidnappers.

The operation was formally launched by the police at the Police Training School, Iperu-Remo, Ogun State, where the Commissioners of Police in Ogun and Lagos states, Bode Ojajuni and Tijani Fatai, respectively, outlined the objectives of the initiative.

Ojajuni said the operation was designed to flush out kidnappers and other violent criminals hiding in forests, border communities and ungoverned spaces across the two states.

He said the name “Kosaye” captured the mission of the security operation, ensuring that criminals had no safe haven within the Lagos-Ogun axis.

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Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu and Ogun State Governor Dapo Abiodun have commended the security initiative, describing the operation as evidence of the importance of inter-state collaboration in tackling insecurity.

Sanwo-Olu, in a statement by the Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Gbenga Omotoso, praised the police and other security agencies for what he described as a “massive onslaught” against criminal elements.

The governor said the results recorded under the operation demonstrated the effectiveness of intelligence-led policing and cooperation between neighbouring states.

“We will continue to work with the police and other security agencies to ensure that our state is safe and secure for residents and visitors.

“We appreciate the huge efforts of the police as directed by Inspector-General Olatunji Disu, in arresting the suspects and the cooperation of our neighbours, Ogun State. This is the way it should be,” Sanwo-Olu said.

He urged residents to continue supporting security agencies by providing timely information on criminal activities and suspected hideouts.

“We will do our best to ensure that our law enforcement agencies are well motivated through the Lagos State Security Trust Fund,” the governor said.

Abiodun, on his part, described the operation as a proactive and intelligence-driven response to emerging security threats.

In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Kayode Akinmade, the governor said the collaboration between both states had restored public confidence in the ability of security agencies to protect lives and property.

“The achievements recorded under ‘Operation Kosaye’ have restored public confidence in the Nigeria Police Force and reinforced the commitment of security agencies to the protection of lives and property,” Abiodun said.

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He added that the sustained security offensive had made Lagos and Ogun increasingly difficult environments for criminals seeking to exploit state boundaries.

“The sustained offensive against criminal elements has effectively made Ogun and Lagos States increasingly hostile to kidnappers, bandits and other violent criminals who had attempted to exploit the shared border communities as safe havens,” he said.

Abiodun also commended the Inspector-General of Police, as well as the Lagos and Ogun police commissioners and participating officers, for their roles in the operation.

According to him, the exercise showed that criminals could only be effectively tackled when security agencies shared intelligence and operated beyond jurisdictional limitations.

“Operation Kosaye has demonstrated the importance of collaboration, intelligence sharing and coordinated inter-state action in tackling emerging security threats,” he said.

The Ogun governor urged other states to adopt similar joint security frameworks to prevent criminals from taking advantage of administrative boundaries to evade arrest.

Security authorities said the operation would continue as operatives intensify surveillance and intelligence gathering across forests, border communities and other locations identified as possible criminal hideouts.

Lagos and Ogun State governments also reaffirmed their commitment to providing logistical support, technology and other resources to strengthen security operations across the two states.

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Crime

Photos: NDLEA Intercepts ₦12.3 Billion Canadian Loud, Busts Drug Syndicate

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Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have arrested a businesswoman, Iwebema Ogechi Peace, at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja, Lagos, after allegedly discovering 7.5 kilograms of cocaine concealed in a false compartment of her luggage.

This was disclosed in a statement to Naija News on Sunday signed by the agency’s spokesperson, Femi Babafemi.

The 38-year-old suspect, who claimed she regularly travelled to China to purchase goods for sale in Nigeria, was arrested on June 21 while preparing to board a Qatar Airways flight to Beijing.

According to the NDLEA, the arrest followed credible intelligence, while a search of her luggage uncovered four large parcels of cocaine professionally concealed beneath a false bottom.

In another major operation, the anti-narcotics agency recovered 4,959 kilograms of Canadian Loud, a potent strain of cannabis, with an estimated street value of ₦12.397 billion at the Apapa Port in Lagos.

The seizure followed more than four weeks of intelligence-led surveillance on a 40-foot container carrying 195 sacks of the illicit substance alongside a Ford and a Nissan vehicle.

The container was tracked from Toronto, Canada, through Montreal and Morocco before arriving in Lagos.

The drugs were recovered during a joint examination involving officers of the NDLEA, the Nigeria Customs Service and other security agencies.

The agency also uncovered a syndicate allegedly involved in planting illicit drugs inside the luggage of unsuspecting interstate travellers.

The operation began after NDLEA operatives intercepted a Sienna bus travelling from Nnewi, Anambra State, to Abuja at Abaji in the Federal Capital Territory.

A package containing 467.7 grams of methamphetamine concealed inside a bag of clothes was recovered during the search.

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The supposed recipient, Gloria Peter, was arrested at Utako Motor Park but denied ownership of the package.

Subsequent investigations led to the arrest of loaders in Nnewi, who allegedly confessed that the package had been secretly placed in the woman’s luggage on the instruction of the bus driver, Abdurrazak Isah.

The driver later identified another passenger, Onyebuchi Victor Okoye, as the owner of the illicit consignment, leading to his arrest in Abuja.

NDLEA operatives also arrested two nationals of the Benin Republic, Hossou Tito Julien, 30, and Mancellim Dossou, 19, alongside a Nigerian, Jackson ThankGod, after intercepting a truck conveying 558,900 pills of Tramadol 250mg.

The truck, travelling from Togo through the Benin Republic into Nigeria, was intercepted on the Mile 2 Bridge in Lagos following intelligence reports.

A search of the vehicle uncovered the tramadol tablets hidden inside a fabricated compartment.

In another operation, officers arrested 57-year-old Ikechukwu Uwakwe at the Iddo Motor Park in Lagos with 209.5 kilograms of Scottish Loud allegedly destined for Enugu State.

Along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Lucky Abonga and Osas Azamobo were arrested while transporting 118 kilograms of skunk concealed among legitimate goods in a truck travelling from Lagos to Onitsha.

Similarly, Helen Ese Idiji, 40, and Rashidat Sa’adullah, 53, were arrested in the Amukoko area of Lagos with 28.8 kilograms of skunk.

Investigations indicated that Helen allegedly stored the illicit drugs at Rashidat’s residence before distributing them to customers.

The Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (retd.), commended officers involved in the operations for their sustained efforts in drug supply reduction and public sensitisation under the War Against Drug Abuse campaign.

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He urged personnel across the country to remain vigilant and sustain the momentum in the fight against illicit drug trafficking and abuse.

Source: naijanews.com

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Crime

PHOTOS: Police arrest two women for alleged child trafficking and ritual activities, rescue four children in Niger State

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The Niger State Police Command has rescued four children from suspected traffickers operating under the guise of adoption and orphanage services.

Spokesperson for the command, SP Wasiu Abiodun, who disclosed this in a statement on Friday, June 26, 2026 said the suspects, Promise Chukwudi, 68, and her accomplice, Mrs Suzanna Onojekwo, 62, were arrested for child trafficking and ritual activities.

According to the PPRO, the children were recovered on June 3, 2026, during a raid on a residence behind the old NEPA area in Suleja, where police arrested the two women.

One of the children was found in Onojekwo’s residence on Church Road in the same town.

The suspects claimed the children, all originally from Karim-Lamido in Gassol Local Government Area of Taraba State, had been lawfully released to them by their parents between November 2025 and February 2026 for adoption purpose.

Contrary to the suspects’ claims, several parents from Abuja, Nasarawa, and Benue States emerged to claim the children.

Mrs Chukwudi said she previously operated an orphanage known as Precious Promise Nursery, Primary and Orphanage Home in 2022, which she resumed in November 2025, and that she described herself as a licensed herbal medical practitioner.

During a search of her residence, a shrine, animal skulls, pieces of multi-coloured clothing and bird feathers, amongst other fetish items, were discovered.

“Police operatives of the Command’s State Intelligence Department, acting on reliable information on 3rd June 2026 mobilized to a location behind old Nepa area, Suleja where a suspected child trafficker and ritualist was arrested, and four children between the ages of 4-7yrs were rescued,” the statement read.

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“The suspects arrested include; Mrs Promise Chukwudi 68yrs of Suleja, and her accomplice, Mrs Suzanna Onojekwo 62yrs of Church road, Suleja in whose residence one of the children was found.

“The suspects claimed that the children were released to them by their parents, all natives of Karim-Lamido in Gassol LGA of Taraba State, between the months of November to February 2026 for adoption.

“She added that she previously ran an orphanage home called Precious Promise Nursery, Primary & Orphanage home in 2022, but resumed operation in November 2025.

“She also claimed to be a licensed herbal medical practitioner who provides local medicine for ailments.

“During investigations, different parents emerged from Abuja, Nasarawa and Benue States to claim the children contrary to the suspect’s claim and in the course of searching her residence, the following were discovered; a shrine, animal skulls, pieces of multi-coloured clothing and bird feathers, amongst other fetish items.

“The suspects were transferred to the Police headquarters Minna for discreet investigation and the children were handed over to child rights agency for care, as investigation to identify the parents continues.

“The suspects have been charged to court for prosecution.”

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