Tag: Amotekun

  • Amotekun nabs two for alleged shop burglary in Osogbo

    Amotekun nabs two for alleged shop burglary in Osogbo

    The Osun State Security Network, codenamed Amotekun, has arrested a 30-year-old security guard from Ibadan, Tobi Omoranti, and his 45-year-old accomplice, a motorcyclist, Hamzat Mukaila, for allegedly attempting to burgle a shop in Osogbo.

    The suspects were apprehended around 12:25 a.m. on Monday in the Ita-Olokan area of the state capital with a gun and a cutlass, reportedly used for the operation.

    According to a statement by Amotekun spokesperson, Yusuf Idowu, residents promptly alerted the corps, leading to the arrest. He added that other suspects involved in various offences across the state were also arrested, warning criminals to stay away from Osun.

    Read Also: Amotekun deploys personnel in Ogun forest reserves

    He said, “One Monsuru Moshood was caught in the act of stealing electrical wire from an uncompleted building, Nurudeen Olawale from Ibadan, was apprehended while attempting to steal money from a mosque located in the Ogo-Oluwa area of Osogbo, a 21-year-old suspect, Oladare Yusuf, was arrested after stealing cocoa from a farm, and Olamide Olowo was arrested after defrauding 10 people.

    “The Corps Commander of Osun Amotekun, Dr. Isaac Omoyele, lauded the swift response of the corps’ operatives and commended the residents of Osun State for their continued support of the outfit.

  • Amotekun nabs 51 suspected criminals across Ondo

    Amotekun nabs 51 suspected criminals across Ondo

    Operatives of the Ondo State Security Network Agency, codenamed Amotekun, have arrested 51 suspected criminals for various offences across the state.

    The suspects were apprehended for crimes including kidnapping, armed robbery, burglary, human trafficking, rape, and violations of the anti-open grazing law, following intelligence-led operations.

    Parading them before journalists in Akure on Friday, the Commander of the Amotekun Corps, Adetunji Adeleye, said the arrests were carried out across all 18 local government areas of Ondo State.

    He disclosed that six of the suspects were directly linked to kidnapping, while others were involved in crimes threatening the peace and security of the state.

    “Today, we are parading 51 suspects arrested in various nooks and crannies and forests of the state. We have 37 suspects arrested for breaking the law and order, six major kidnap suspects, and one case of rape.

    “As a result of the activities of the Amotekun Rangers in the forests, we were able to dismantle a terrible kidnapping syndicate. One of their armourers, who is here today, confessed to being involved in five major kidnap operations within the state,” Adeleye said.

    Read Also: Osun Amotekun arrests notorious kidnap kingpin after gun battle

    The Amotekun boss further disclosed that among those arrested was a 27-year-old suspect identified as Sadiq, who had an ongoing criminal case in court but jumped administrative bail and fled the state.

    “He ran away outside Ondo State, but with the help of our trackers, we were able to bring him back,” Adeleye added.

    He revealed that while all 51 suspects had undergone interrogation, 35 would face prosecution, while others might be handled through the corps’ internal dispute resolution mechanism.

    “If they fail to scale through the resolution process, they will still end up in a court of competent jurisdiction. Once again, we are saying Ondo State is not safe for criminals. Pack your things and go. The government and the good people of the state are opposed to kidnapping for ransom,” he warned.

    Adeleye reiterated that the Corps remains committed to ensuring that forest reserves and farmlands across the state are safe for farmers and investors to operate without fear.

  • Amotekun deploys personnel in Ogun forest reserves

    Amotekun deploys personnel in Ogun forest reserves

    The Ogun State Security Network, codenamed Amotekun Corps has deployed personnel to forest reserves, rural areas, schools, urban centres and government facilities, to boost its security architecture.

    The State Commander of the Corps, Brig.-Gen. Alade Adedigba (rtd), disclosed this on Friday in Abeokuta during an interactive session with reporters.

    Adedigba said that Amotekun has now deployed its officers in every area of security concern across the state, including highways, attributing the feat to the logistical and manpower support from the state government.

    According to him, the corps boasts of no fewer than 50 operational vehicles and over 75 motorbikes to aid its mobility.

    “Currently we have deployment in tertiary institutions and vocational institutions. This is made possible because we are being equipped and funded,” he said.

    Adedigba said that the major reason why it has enjoyed maximum support from the state government was to ensure that people “sleep with their two eyes closed.”

    Read Also: FG revokes license of Oritsemeyin rig

    He said the various support rendered to Amotekun in areas of recruitment, prompt payment of salaries and emoluments, among others, motivated the operatives to be diligent in their assignments.

     “My target is getting criminals off the streets and keeping Ogun state safe, rather than competing with other security agencies over prosecution of arrested suspects.

     “The state government is already working to review the Ogun State Security Network Agency and Amotekun Corps Law, 2020.

     “Earlier this year, we resubmitted a new draft bill for Amotekun to the Ministry of Justice.

     “The Ministry is reviewing it and very soon, it will get to the Ogun State House of Assembly for deliberations, passage and eventual assent by the governor,” he said.

     Adedigba expressed his readiness to work with other security agencies in the state in ensuring safety of lives and properties.

  • Osun Amotekun arrests notorious kidnap kingpin after gun battle

    Osun Amotekun arrests notorious kidnap kingpin after gun battle

    The Osun State Security Network, codenamed Amotekun, has arrested a notorious kidnap kingpin, popularly known as Bishop, following a gun battle with operatives over the weekend.

    The suspect was tracked to his hideout at Isokun, Ilesa, around 5:59 p.m. on Saturday.

    According to the Corps Commander, Adekunle Isaac Omoyele, Bishop—who had been on the wanted list of several security agencies—was arrested alongside another suspect, while efforts are ongoing to apprehend other fleeing gang members.

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    Omoyele explained that the suspects engaged Amotekun operatives in a fierce exchange of gunfire before being subdued.

    “Using tactical decoys and superior strategy, our operatives overpowered the suspects,” he said.

    During the operation, which lasted several hours, security operatives recovered hard drugs and assorted charms allegedly used by the gang for fortification.

    He added that the arrest marks a major breakthrough in the fight against violent crime in Osun State, while assuring that a manhunt has been launched for the fleeing suspects.

  • Amotekun goes after crime financiers, godfathers in Ondo

    Amotekun goes after crime financiers, godfathers in Ondo

    The Ondo State Security Network Agency, otherwise known as the Amotekun Corps, has declared a clampdown on ‘financiers and masterminds’ of crimes across the state.

    State Commander of Amotekun, Adetunji Adeleye, made this known while parading 28 suspected criminals arrested before journalists in Akure on Tuesday. 

    Adeleye explained that the corps had gone beyond merely arresting criminals, stressing that efforts are now focused on dismantling the networks that sustain crime.

    “The criminal world is evolving, and we have gone beyond arresting suspects alone. Amotekun always strives to be ahead of them. We are now after their godfathers and backbones because until we uproot them, we won’t have total peace,” he said.

    The corps commander revealed that the 28 suspects had recently been arrested for various offences such kidnapping, armed robbery, rape and among others. 

    He emphasised that the corps is determined to break the chain of criminality in the state to pave the way for socio-economic growth.

    Adeleye noted that the agency’s interventions contributed to a significant boost in the state’s finances.

    “By the intervention of Amotekun, the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of Ondo State increased by over 500 per cent in 2023,” he disclosed.

    Read Also: Amotekun: Ondo residents issue score card five years after

    He added that Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa had directed the corps to ensure an enabling environment for investors, while assuring that the state’s security architecture remains solid.

    “The best criminals can do is to run away from Ondo State. Our joint patrol teams are still active, and we have also dominated the forests. Farmers can now return to their farms,” he said.

    Adeleye urged residents to always provide timely information to security agencies.

    “When you see something, quickly say something and let us intervene, because if you delay, the delay might be dangerous,” he advised.

  • Amotekun: Ondo residents issue score card five years after

    Amotekun: Ondo residents issue score card five years after

    •We’ve flushed out criminals, restored farming – Commander

    Concerned by the rising wave of insecurity bedevilling the South-West region, governors of the six states met in 2020 to chart a collective response, culminating in the birth of the Western Nigeria Security Network Agency otherwise known as Operation Àmòtékún. Ondo State correspondent of The Nation, TOSIN TOPE, takes a look at the indigenous security outfit’s five-year journey in the state and the concerns of residents over its effectiveness in tackling crime.

    Amid Fanfare, Southwest governors, led by the then Ondo State governor and Chairman of the South-West Governors’ Forum (SGF), the late Rotimi Akeredolu, converged on Ibadan, Oyo State capital, to unveil the Amotekun Corps. The name, a Yoruba word for the leopard, symbolises vigilance, agility and readiness to defend the region.

    According to the initiators, the local security outfit was designed to tackle some heinous crimes confronting the Southwest region, particularly clashes between farmers and herders, kidnapping, armed robbery and recurrent cult clashes.

    To support the operations of Amotekun, the governors made significant contributions, donating vehicles, motorcycles, security gadgets, and other equipment with a view to strengthening its capacity to address the region’s security challenges.

    The launch of the Amotekun Corps was greeted with optimism and high expectations, rekindling the faith of the people of Ondo State, who had long grappled with rising insecurity, a menace that had not only plagued the Southwest but the nation as a whole.

    Sigh of relief

    Once known for its peaceful atmosphere, the sunshine state had, over time, become unsafe for residents and motorists across much of its 18 local government areas – with kidnapping, banditry, armed robbery, rape, cultism and farmers/herders clashes on the rise.

    In particular, the northern senatorial district of Ondo emerged as a hotspot, where marauders unleashed frequent and deadly attacks, leaving many residents unable to move freely for fear of being targeted.

    Amid these cries for help, the late Governor Rotimi Akeredolu took the bull by the horns, determined to protect his people from the aggressors. In August 2020, he formally inaugurated and equipped the Amotekun Corps in Ondo State, marking a decisive step in the fight against insecurity.

    Unveiling the Amotekun Corps at the Gani Fawehinmi Arcade in Akure, the state capital, the late governor declared that with an indigenous security outfit now in place to confront criminal elements, it would no longer be business as usual for the criminals laying siege to highways and farmlands to abduct people for ransom.

    “It was so horrible that marauders laid siege to the highways as well as in the farmlands, waiting to kidnap or devour anyone in sight.

    “With the launch of the Amotekun, we resolved that it shall be no retreat, no surrender. We are not going to be intimidated or blackmailed.

    ”It is incontrovertible that the existing security framework is being overstretched, and we had to devise a means of confronting the challenge of insecurity head-on. That was when the concept of Amotekun came up.

    “As Yoruba, we are not known to surrender to our adversaries. And if our forebears did not, we should not,” he declared, signalling the birth of the indigenous security outfit to protect the people and any internal and external aggressors aiming to wreak havoc in the state.

    High expectations amid sorrow, anger, bloodshed

    But five years on, many residents are asking whether Amotekun has truly lived up to expectations in tackling the state’s security challenges.

    While acknowledging that the corps have made notable strides, including flushing out criminals from some hideouts and preventing certain crimes before they occur, they saluted the foresight of the late Governor Akeredolu.

    The residents say pockets of insecurity remain, with kidnapping for ransom, banditry, and cult-related violence continuing to cast a shadow on parts of the state and raising fresh questions about the Amotekun Corps’ reach and capacity.

    A few of them who spoke with ‘The Nation’ lamented that the criminal activities of armed groups terrorising and killing farmers and locals while using the state forest reserves as hideouts persist, particularly in Akure North Local Government Area of the state which has been the hotbed of the gang’s criminal activities.

    One incident that stirred deep concern was the abduction and killing of Nelson Adepoyigi, the local chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ifon, Ose LGA of the state in May 2025.

    Adepoyigi, Chairman of Ward 5 in Ifon, was reportedly ambushed by bandits at the entrance of his home shortly after returning from his farm on the Ifon-Owo Road. The gunmen demanded a ransom of N100 million but eventually collected N5 million before killing the APC chieftain in their den.

    Before he was killed, the kidnappers had held hostage two ransom bearers who took the N5 million and food items to them as ransom in a bid to secure Adepoyigi’s release. After increasing their captives to three with the abduction of the ransom bearers, they made a fresh demand of N30 million to secure the release of the three captives. But the APC chieftain was killed while they freed the two men.

    Adepoyigi’s tragic case rekindled painful memories of another high-profile killing nearly five years earlier of the Olufon of Ifon, Oba Israel Adeusi. The first-class monarch was shot dead in November 2020 by suspected kidnappers at Elegbeka on the Benin-Owo-Akure Expressway in the same Ose LGA while returning from a meeting of the Council of Obas in Akure.

    The killing of Oba Adeusi occurred just hours after daredevil armed robbers attacked a branch of an old-generation bank in Ode-Irele, headquarters of Irele Local Government Area.

    In another incident, 46-year-old health worker Akinola Oyabiyi was shot dead by suspected bandits while returning home from work in February this year.

    Oyebiyi had reportedly resisted an attempted abduction at Eleyowo community, just a stone’s throw from Akure Airport at Oba Ile in Akure North Local Government Area of the state.

    His attackers kidnapped his young son, who spent about 10 days in captivity before regaining freedom after the family had paid an undisclosed ransom.

    Bloody attacks on communities

    In March and April, the state was jolted by the gruesome murder of several farmers in Aba Oyinbo, Akure North Local Government Area. The killings sparked outrage, prompting locals to stage a protest at Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa’s office in Alagbaka, Akure. Carrying the corpses of the slain farmers and clutching leaves – a traditional symbol of distress – the protesters demanded urgent action, declaring that they had had enough of persistent attacks on their community.

    The violence was mirrored in four other neighbouring communities of Ademekun, Aba Pastor, Aba Sunday and Alajido, where suspected bandits struck in the dead of night, murdering no fewer than 14 farmers in their sleep. The coordinated attacks deepened fears in the minds of the natives suggesting that rural areas of the state remain dangerously exposed despite security measures.

    The marauders struck around 2 am., plunging the sleeping communities into a nightmare. They unleashed terror on farmers and their families, leaving behind a trail of blood, sorrow, anger and anguish. By dawn, the villages were littered with the corpses of slain farmers splattered with blood stains, marked by fresh wounds, and scarred by burnt homes. Many houses and huts were reduced to ashes in the wake of the brutal assault.

    Beyond the killings, cases of abduction have persisted despite concerted effort, particularly by the Amotekun Corps, to nip kidnapping in the bud.

    In May, three members of the Deeper Christian Life Ministry were abducted while returning from a Bible study session in the Kasemola area, near Ogbese in Akure North Local Government Area. Their captors demanded a ransom of N15 million for their release, adding yet another case to the growing list of unresolved security concerns in the state.

    Amid these hues, the state also recorded a string of high-profile kidnappings, including the abduction of 10 travellers along the Benin-Owo highway at Ipele in Owo Local Government Area. The victims, who were travelling from Akwa Ibom State to Akure, were ambushed by bandits and herded into the bush.

    In another incident, nine surveyors working at a site in Ilu Abo, Akure Local Government Area, were abducted. Their captors initially demanded N100 million for their release. But after negotiations, N20 million was reportedly paid. The victims spent more than a week in captivity before regaining freedom.

    While Amotekun operatives pursued the perpetrators, another case emerged: three farmers, all graduates of the Federal College of Agriculture (FECA), were seized while working on their farmland in Akure North. The armed group marched them into the dense forest, just a few kilometres from Akure Airport in Oba Ile. The kidnappers demanded N300 million but eventually accepted N5 million after the victims had spent several days in captivity.

    Shortly afterwards, a similar case occurred in the same area, where a farmer and his labourer were kidnapped on their way back from the farm. They were released only after their families had raised an undisclosed sum as ransom.

    The foregoing and other incidents have fuelled growing public doubts over the effectiveness of the Amotekun Corps. While security experts point to the influx of armed gangs into Ondo and other South-West states often through porous border towns, villages and rural communities, many residents wonder whether the state’s indigenous security outfit is truly making the desired impact.

    Just last week, a staff member of the Adekunle Ajasin University Akungba-Akoko (AAUA), Omoniyi Eleyinmi, was abducted  while returning from office to his residence at Supare-Akoko in the Akoko Southwest LGA of the state. Eleyinmi was seized by the gun-wielding men, who had laid an ambush at his home, shooting sporadically as he stepped down from a commercial motorcycle he rode home from office before whisking him away.

    The kidnappers initially demanded N100 million ransom from the family but later reduced it to N7 million after a series of negotiations.

    Moved by his abduction, the AAUA Alumni Association – of which Eleyinmi is a member – launched an appeal for donations to raise the ransom. The association’s Global Publicity Secretary, O’Seun Ogunsakin, asked the members and Nigerians to donate within 24 hours to secure his release, providing a Polaris Bank account number for that purpose.

    However, the kidnap victim regained his freedom last Sunday, nearly a week after his abduction, and was immediately reunited with his family.

    Nemesis, however, caught up with his suspected abductors who were later nabbed by the police while allegedly sharing their ransom.

    In a viral video posted on social media, the gang of three suspects reported to have abducted Eleyinmi were nabbed inside a forest in Ago panu – a village and settlement between Oba Akoko and Owo area of the state.

    While the abduction cases were going on, a self-acclaimed president of the Afenifere Youth Council, Prince Eniola Ojajuni, sparked controversy in March after alleging that four traditional rulers in Ondo State were conniving with kidnappers amid the surge in abduction cases.

    Ojajuni, whose claims quickly went viral on social media, said his revelation was based on conversations he had with his abductors in February this year while travelling from Ondo State to Abuja.

    Although he did not name the monarchs, Ojajuni claimed they were from the Northern Senatorial District — an axis that has recorded frequent killings, kidnappings and cases of rape by armed groups.

    “Four Obas are working with the Fulani herdsmen from Ondo North because we don’t want to talk because the governor is from Ilaje Local Government Area,” Ojajuni said.

    He also criticised security agencies, particularly the police, for failing to invite him for a formal debriefing over his ordeal. According to him, the abductors, mostly herdsmen, are the same elements being confronted by the Amotekun Corps.

    Residents call for better funding, intelligence for Amotekun Corps

    Residents of the state have called for urgent and adequate equipment of the Amotekun Corps to confront the rising wave of abductions and killings. Abiola Oluwajana, a resident, expressed worries over the increasing incidents of kidnapping in both homes and farms, alleging that bandits now operate with the help of informants within communities.

    “If not for Amotekun, things would be far worse,” Oluwajana said.

    “Insecurity is not peculiar to Ondo State. It is a national and global problem. But if Amotekun were well equipped, they could do more to fight these criminals.

    “You can’t compare the AK-47 rifles and other weapons the bandits carry with what our indigenous security personnel use.

    “Southwest governors need to meet again and address this, because residents are living in fear.

    “It also feels like Amotekun is no longer funded to operate effectively.”

    He also advised the Corps to strengthen its intelligence-gathering capabilities, warning that kidnappers now storm residential areas after identifying victims through insider information.

    “These senseless killings and abductions are serious. Amotekun can tackle them, but they need more government assistance,” Oluwajana added.

    Fear is particularly high among Akoko residents of border towns near Kogi and Edo states, where locals report a growing influx of unfamiliar faces.

    Oluwakemi Adeogun, a businesswoman and farmer in Akunnu Akoko, stressed the need for stronger collaboration between Amotekun, the Vigilante Group of Nigeria, local hunters and other security agencies.

    “It sometimes feels like Amotekun is working in isolation,” she said.

    “Many of these strangers enter the state through border towns posing as scavengers, but they are actually informants.

    “Amotekun should deploy more personnel to rural and border areas, because that is where these criminals first arrive before moving to commit crimes.

    “With adequate support, I know they can handle this security breach.”

    PDP, APC bicker over escalating security challenges

    As residents voice their growing concerns over escalating insecurity in the state, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate in the November 16, 2024 election and former deputy governor, Agboola Ajayi, recently clashed with the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) over the worsening security situation in the sunshine state.

    Ajayi had, in a statement, urged residents to defend themselves and accused Governor Aiyedatiwa of failing to adequately address the threat posed by the armed groups. He specifically called for an urgent overhaul of the Amotekun Corps to combat bandit attacks.

    “The need to take full grip of this crisis cannot be delayed a day longer. I call on the governor to seek help and take actions that will take Ondo State back from the grip of invading bandits forthwith.

    “The government must revamp Amotekun immediately and re-create armed forest guards to police our forests and uproot all invading criminal elements so that peace can reign,” Ajayi remarked.

    But the advice did not sit well with the ruling APC, which dismissed Ajayi’s remark as politically motivated and highly misleading.

    APC’s spokesperson in the state, Steve Otaloro, argued that the prevailing security crisis is not peculiar to Ondo but part of a nationwide challenge.

    “Mr. Agboola Ajayi’s assertions regarding the alleged inefficacy of the current administration are not only unfounded but also politically motivated,” the APC said.

    “His comments reflect a blatant attempt to exploit the sensitive issue of security for political gain, especially after his significant defeat in the last governorship election.

    “Instead of offering constructive criticism or solutions, he chooses to engage in fear-mongering, which only serves to create panic among the populace.”

    Aiyedatiwa distribute 50 vehicles for security agencies, including Amotekun, to fight crime

    In June, Governor Aiyedatiwa restated his administration’s commitment to safeguarding lives and property when he presented 50 new operational vehicles to security agencies, including the Amotekun Corps in the state.

    At the distribution, which was part of the activities used to mark his first 100 days in office, the governor described the gesture as a significant milestone in the collective quest for a safer and more secure Ondo State, stating that the vehicles would boost the capacity and responsiveness of security formations across the state, ensuring swift action to any security alert or criminal activity.

    “Today’s distribution of operational vehicles is a clear demonstration of our administration’s resolve to strengthen the effectiveness, efficiency, and capacity of our security agencies,” he said.

    Highlighting the importance of synergy among all security stakeholders, Aiyedatiwa noted that the initiative aligns with his administration’s development blueprint tagged ‘Our Ease’, which places the safety of citizens at its core.

    Amotekun has filled critical gap in community-level security – Ondo AG, Ajulo

    Reacting, the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice in the State, Kayode Ajulo, SAN, opined that the Amotekun Corps has “performed exceptionally well” in tackling security challenges in the state, stressing that the regional security outfit remained the most potent reference point to address the menace of incessant kidnappings and banditry in the region.

    “Amötekun has performed exceptionally well in Ondo State, and indeed, across all Southwest states, The corps has filled a critical gap in community-level security, especially in areas where the national structure cannot adequately cover.

    “In fact, in our advocacy for this constitutional reform, Amötékun remains our most potent reference point. Its achievements speak for themselves, and no one can deny the remarkable results recorded.

    “Nigeria’s growing population and evolving crime patterns require a decentralised policing model.

    “Our current ratio of one police officer to 600-650 citizens is already far below the UN’s recommended ratio of 1,450, which, in my view, is still inadequate for a country as complex as ours.

    “Amötèkun is a clear example that with the right support, state-controlled security structures can work and work effectively.”

    Dealt penalty for kidnappers

    Disturbed by the growing concerns over incessant abduction traced to herders, the state government in June announced that henceforth, anyone found guilty of kidnapping in the state would face the death by hanging.

    Briefing reporters after the meeting of the State Executive Council in Akure, the state capital, Ajulo said the government was taking stringent action, including demolishing buildings and facilities used by kidnappers in committing crimes..

    He explained that the anti-kidnapping law would be reviewed by the Ondo State House of Assembly, which will prescribe the death penalty for kidnappers by hanging, stressing that the council was also concerned about the spate of cultism in the state and would do everything necessary to decisively deal with the situation.

     “The governor, being a lover of the rule of law, would not go the way it’s being done in other states without following necessary court due process.

    “We should know that we have investors coming to the state, and as part of the measures, we should ensure we encourage them that they and their investments are safe,” Ajulo noted.

    Ondo becomes the second state this year to have called for death by hanging for kidnappers. In April, the Edo governor, Monday Okpebholo, said kidnappers caught in the state would face the death penalty, specifically by hanging.

    Success amidst challenges

    Speaking on the challenges that have bedevilled the operations of the regional security outfit in the state upon its inception, the Commander of the Amotekun Corps in Ondo, Adetunji Adeleye, told ‘The Nation’ that the farmers and herders crisis was the major issue that bedevilled the local security agency upon inception.

    According to Adeleye, local farmers had completely left their farms for fear of being kidnapped and killed after investing lots of money and resources. But respite later came their way following the birth of the Amotekun Corps who uses the option of ‘mediation’ between the farmers and the leadership of Miyetti Allah to resolved the perennial security threat and crises.

    “So, the biggest of the challenges we were faced with when we came in were the farmers’ clashes, and we had close to 20,000 petitions within six months.

    “We started with mass education of both the herders and the farmers, explaining the limitations of each group.

    “Farmers, yes, you can farm, but don’t take the law into your hands by killing cows. Herders, you have a right to rearing your cows, but you don’t have a right to disrupt the business of the other group, which is farming. So, don’t destroy their crops. Where it happens, we mediate.

    “So, after that, we brought the leadership of the farmers and the Miyetti Allah together, and we took them to the government, because at that time, there was serious food insecurity in the state and in the country generally, and because people were no longer going to farm.

    “So, I would want people back. The government wanted people to go back to farms. So, we were able to restore normalcy within a year, though very difficult.

    “We impounded well over 10,000 cows. Within the period of about three years, we arrested about 170 in the first three years.

    “But along the line, we found a bottleneck in the judicial attention needed. So, we approached the government, and graciously, the House of Assembly and the state government came up with the anti-open-grazing law, which is in force up till today, and I will tell you that it really enhanced our operations and brought down farmers-herders clashes to reality.

    “To further address farmers-herders clash, using the the anti-open-grazing law, there is a total ban on night grazing, because most of the crops were destroyed in the night, then underage grazing, because they give these cows to small children; 100 cows to 2, 3, 4 children. They don’t have good control of them. “There is a ban on metropolitan grazing. There is a ban on highway grazing,” he added.

    While identifying other security challenges such as bank robberies in the past and activities of commercial motorcyclists otherwise known as ‘Okada riders’ used in perpetrating crime, Adeleye said the influx of strangers to the state also increased the security breaches.

    He noted that the development made the Amotekun Corps to deploy personnel to the border towns for patrol and mount the boundaries in the northern senatorial district of the state in collaboration with conventional security agencies.

    “There is no Amotekun in Edo. We only mount to the boundary of Ondo State on both sides, the Benin side and the other side, and this tremendously brought down criminal activities there.

    “Of late, we started having upsurge in kidnapping, especially initially at that time at the borders, knowing full well that there’s no way to cooperate within the metropolis.

    “So we moved to the northern territorial districts where we had this upsurge, and before then, in the last one year, we’ve been having a very huge influx of strange people in the states.

    “They bring them in trailers; young men in their hundreds. And most times when we profile them, they don’t even know where they are going. They say they just park trucks and they put them inside.

    “The state government decided that we should be sending them back because the freedom of movement in the country does not preclude the fact that it must be a purposeful movement. You must know where you are going, what you are going to do, you must be able to justify it.

    “But most of the time, these people, they don’t have anything.

    “Just when we are getting over that, we have this upsurge of thousands of them coming in as hunters. Somebody leaving the extreme north, coming down to the southwest to hunt, as if there are no forests before you get to Ondo State.”

    In making efforts to overcome the security crisis, the Amotekun boss affirmed, the security outfit is also confronted with the challenges of equipment to tackle the criminal elements ravaging the state.

    “The challenges that we face have to do with equipment. Most of the time, we are faced with bandits that operate automatic weapons.

    “But, thank God, Amotekun from inception is conventional and unconventional security. So we also did not allow that to deter us.”

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    He added: “We faced them, but I can tell you that it’s not a tea party. But at least we have been able to curtail them and bring normalcy.

    “Recently, there were breaches in Akure North. We found out that when we patrol, we go there, we come back. They only allow us to come out of the place before they strike.

    “So the government decided that the Amotekun rangers be domiciled right in the forest. So as we talk now, we have more than 10 station posts, where the Amotekun rangers have their offices inside the forest. And this has brought to normalcy farming activities there.

    “This is not to say that there are not one or two security breaches, or it has greatly reduced. At least people can go back to the farm. People are beginning to have confidence in farming the way it should be.

    “We ensure that 18 local governments and state headquarters are policed. Every major outlet you find Amotekun officers in uniform and plain clothes. And I can assure you that this year that is coming, we will be able to ensure and guarantee safety of lives and property.”

    Despite the challenges, the Amotekun boss said the security outfit has recorded success, especially with the prosecution and conviction of over 5, 000 arrested criminals in the state through the office of the Public Prosecution, Ministry of Justice.

    He also disclosed that the training and retraining of its personnel using resources both within and outside the state have been a great way to enhance the capacity and efficiency of the Amotekun officers for operations.

    “Cumulatively, we have secured prosecution and conviction of hundreds of criminals. And we have well over 5,000 criminal cases being prosecuted using the office of the Public Prosecution Ministry of Justice and Amotekun itself.

    “Since the amended law of Amotekun allows us to arrest, investigate and prosecute, we have been exploring this. We thank the government for the support.

    “Recently, the government even increased and fulfilled the minimum wage of workers. In actual fact, what we do now is an enhance Amotekun salary scale, which is very good for the operatives.

    “It’s a good morale booster for them. And you find out that the security situation of the states that went wild about six weeks ago had been brought to normalcy.

    “And we will continue to do our best to ensure that we give the best in terms of quality security services to the good people of Ondo State.

    “So we thank the governor of Ondo State for the support while looking for procurement of additional equipment to enhance our operations.

    “And apart from that, we do routine training for operatives, for professionals, for drivers. The last of those training was about three weeks ago when all management staff, all area commanders, all divisional officers, all local government coordinators, and heads of all tactical units were brought together, in addition to metropolitan patrol officers, and were brought together for intensive training at the headquarters by experts.”

  • Amotekun, suspected kidnappers in gun duel in Oyo community

    Amotekun, suspected kidnappers in gun duel in Oyo community

    At least three suspected kidnappers have reportedly lost their lives, while another escaped with gunshot wounds when they engaged men of the Western Security Networks codenamed Amotekun corps in Otu community, Itesiwaju local government area of Oyo state.

    It was gathered that the suspects who were said to be on a mission in the area were spotted by the local hunters after they had invaded the community four days earlier and succeeded in the kidnapping of one of the residents (name withheld).

    The development was said to have created tension in the community, which necessitated the invitation of the Amotekun Corps.

    The Amotekun operatives reportedly responded promptly and engaged the armed kidnapper in a gun duel.

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    During the confrontation, three of the suspected kidnappers were reportedly gunned down, while one managed to escape with the abducted victim.

    Local sources confirmed that efforts are ongoing to track down the fleeing assailant and rescue the kidnapped individual.

    It was gathered that the matter has been formally reported to the Police Division in Otu for further investigation and coordinated response.

  • Amotekun officer dies after alleged attack by man in military uniform in Osun

    Amotekun officer dies after alleged attack by man in military uniform in Osun

    A 35-year-old operative of the Osun State Amotekun Corps, Peter Tope, has died following an attack allegedly carried out by a man dressed in a military uniform in the Ijeda community of the state.

    The incident reportedly occurred around 5:45 p.m. on Saturday when the suspect, identified simply as Fiyinfoluwa, visited the Amotekun station in Ijebu-Jesa and made disturbing remarks about targeting Amotekun personnel.

    He later returned with accomplices and allegedly attacked Tope while he was riding a motorcycle.

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    According to reports, Tope was struck on the head with a blunt object, causing him to fall and bleed heavily. He was rushed to Wesley Guild Hospital, Ilesa, for treatment, but unfortunately succumbed to his injuries early Sunday morning.

    Confirming the incident, Amotekun Corps Commander, Isaac Omoyele, through the outfit’s spokesman, Yusuf Idowu, said the attack lasted about 20 minutes without any intervention. After the assault, the alleged attacker fled the scene on a commercial motorcycle.

    The matter has been reported to the Divisional Police Headquarters in Ijebu-Jesa and the military command at the Engineering Cantonment in Ede.

    Investigations are ongoing to uncover the full details and ensure justice is served.

  • Amotekun intercepts criminal syndicate linked to electronics theft in southwest

    Amotekun intercepts criminal syndicate linked to electronics theft in southwest

    …parades 7 suspected kidnappers, armed robbers, cultists in Ondo

    Operatives of the Ondo State Security Network Agency, codenamed Amotekun Corps, have apprehended a suspected member of an inter-state criminal syndicate allegedly involved in burgling electronics shops across the Southwest.

    The suspect, whose identity remains undisclosed, was arrested during a routine stop-and-search operation after he was found in possession of mobile phones and electronic gadgets believed to have been stolen from various outlets.

    Speaking while parading the suspect and others arrested for various offences in Akure at the weekend, the Commander of the Amotekun Corps, Mr. Adetunji Adeleye, said the syndicate had been under surveillance for some time due to its coordinated operations targeting electronics stores in the region.

    According to him, the suspect was intercepted aboard a vehicle transporting the stolen items from Lagos, which were allegedly repackaged into empty cartons en route to Ondo State. Suspicious behaviour at a refuelling stop led operatives to conduct a search that uncovered the items.

    “We recovered electronics and phones valued at over ₦300 million. The goods were traced to a licensed electronics dealer in Ondo State, and they will be returned once the court grants the necessary approval,” Adeleye said.

    In a broader operation, Adeleye also announced the arrest of seven other individuals linked to crimes, including kidnapping, armed robbery, burglary, and cultism.

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    He confirmed that Amotekun operatives recently rescued two kidnap victims abducted along the Akure/Itaogbolu Road, whose captors had initially demanded ₦50 million ransom.

    He reaffirmed the corps’ commitment to curbing crime across the state and ensuring the safety of residents in both urban and rural communities.

    “Following a 96-hour search through dense forest terrain, our operatives successfully rescued the victims without any ransom being paid.

    “We continue to advise residents against paying ransom, as we have resolved most kidnapping cases in the last two months without such payments,” Adeleye stated.

    The Commander reaffirmed Amotekun’s commitment to securing the lives and property of residents, urging citizens to promptly report suspicious activities.

    The latest arrest came barely three months after the operatives of the local security outfit busted a five-gang organ harvesting and child trafficking inter-network syndicate.

    The syndicate, mostly women, were smashed after they reportedly sold some children from Ondo to another gang in Anambra State.

    It was gathered that nemesis caught up with the gang after they allegedly abducted a toddler, simply identified as Eriponmile, at the DAVOG area of Ijoka, in the Akure South Local Government Area of the state. 

  • Ondo: Amotekun speaks tough against cultism, unlawful gatherings

    Ondo: Amotekun speaks tough against cultism, unlawful gatherings

    The Ondo State Security Network Agency, codenamed Amotekun Corps, has frowned against any groups and individuals planning to engage in cult-related activities under the guise of marking the symbolic date known as “7/7”.

    The agency said it had received information that some cult groups were plotting to commemorate Monday, July 7, with unlawful gatherings, secret meetings, and violent initiations.

    In a statement released by the state commander of the Amotekun Corps, Adetunji Adeleye, the security outfit described the plans of the cult groups as a serious threat to public safety and the rule of law.

    Adeleye said that operatives of the Amotekun Corps are already patrolling the nooks and crannies of the state, revealing that the “Amotekun Corps will not tolerate it.”

    “Our intelligence has revealed that certain cult groups are mobilising to mark the so-called ‘7/7’ with activities that are not only unlawful but capable of throwing communities into chaos,” he said.

    According to him, the Amotekun Corps is working in partnership and synergy with other security agencies to put in place proactive measures to foil any such violent and unlawful gatherings

    He also warned that anyone caught engaging in cult-related activities would be dealt with decisively and made to face the full weight of the law.

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    While assuring residents of the state of adequate security, Adeleye called on parents and guardians to caution their children and wards against joining any unlawful groups and gatherings.

    He urged traditional rulers, community leaders, and religious institutions to join hands in discouraging youths from engaging in cultism and other criminal tendencies.

    “We are committed to keeping Ondo State safe, and we are counting on the cooperation of the public. If you see something, say something,” Adeleye said.