Military unleashes nationwide offensive, scores of terrorists killed

By Sumaila Ogbaje

The Nigerian military has recorded fresh successes in its ongoing nationwide offensive against terrorism, banditry, kidnapping and other violent crimes, neutralising scores of terrorists, arresting dozens of suspects and rescuing several kidnapped victims within one week.

The Defence Headquarters (DHQ) disclosed the development on Friday, saying troops operating across multiple theatres sustained coordinated land and air operations between May 28 and June 4, dealing significant blows to criminal networks across the country.

Director of Defence Media Operations, Maj.-Gen. Michael Onoja, said the military offensive targeted terrorists, kidnappers, gunrunners, economic saboteurs and other criminal elements threatening national security.

In the North-East, troops of Operation Hadin Kai arrested a suspected kidnapper, 10 terrorist collaborators and informants, while also rescuing five persons who escaped from terrorist enclaves. Troops further neutralised a terrorist and recovered ammunition, communication devices and other operational items.

In the North-West, troops under Operation Fansan Yamma eliminated three terrorists, apprehended a notorious terrorist kingpin and arrested additional suspects linked to terrorist activities. Security forces also recovered an AK-47 rifle, ammunition and dismantled several terrorist camps.

One of the most significant breakthroughs was recorded under Operation Savannah Shield, where troops successfully repelled an ambush in Niger State, neutralising scores of terrorists during the encounter. Security operatives also recovered 15 motorcycles and hundreds of rounds of ammunition, while a wanted terrorist informant linked to previous attacks in Borgu Local Government Area was arrested.

In Kaduna State, troops of Operation Enduring Peace rescued five kidnapped passengers and evacuated two injured victims for urgent medical treatment.

Similarly, troops of Operation Whirl Stroke operating across Kogi, Nasarawa and Taraba states neutralised a terrorist, arrested 10 suspects and rescued two kidnap victims. Recovered exhibits included an AK-47 rifle, magazines, explosives, motorcycles and vehicles.

The military also recorded successes in the South-South region, where troops of Operation Delta Safe arrested seven suspected kidnappers and foiled planned abductions. Security operatives further apprehended suspects linked to the murder of a farmer during a failed kidnap operation.

In the South-East, troops of Operation Udo Ka arrested five suspected members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and its armed wing, the Eastern Security Network (ESN), while successfully rescuing village chiefs who had been held hostage in Ebonyi State.

Maj.-Gen. Onoja said the operations had significantly degraded the operational capabilities of criminal groups and improved security across affected communities.

He assured Nigerians that the Armed Forces would sustain the momentum of ongoing operations until those held captive are rescued and criminal elements are brought to justice.

The defence spokesman also urged members of the public to continue supporting security agencies with credible intelligence, noting that timely information remains critical to the success of military operations nationwide.

He added that the Chief of Defence Staff, General Olufemi Oluyede, had commended troops for their courage, professionalism and commitment in the fight against insecurity across the country.

Premiere Academy students shine at 6th Abuja National Music Competition

The finals of the 6th edition of the Abuja National Music Competition have been held over the weekend. Participants from several Schools from the FCT and other states competed in various categories of the finals through vocal and instrumental performances, with winners carting home cash and other prizes.

Jaja Soibifaa and Iwugo Michael, two students of Premiere Academy, Lugbe, Abuja, emerged Star winners of the day as they were adjudged overall winners in the Vocal and Piano Categories, with each winning the N250,000 cash prize for their respective categories.

While Jaja Soibifaa carted home the Star Prize in the Vocal Category, Iwugo Michael defeated other competitors in the Piano Category.

The Abuja National Music Competition is aimed at fostering creativity among students aged 6-18 and dedicated to reviving the authenticity of Nigerian music by showcasing exceptional vocal and instrumental talents from primary and secondary schools across the country.

This year’s edition aimed to discover, support, and celebrate young musicians who demonstrate outstanding artistic mastery, while serving as a platform for exposure, promoting music education and performance across Nigeria.

It also afforded the students an opportunity to appreciate how healthy competition inspires creativity, with participants benefitting from professional mentorship, in addition to opportunities to perform before an expert jury of renowned music professionals and receive recognition and awards for their dedication and skill.

Speaking on the outstanding feats by Premiere Academy representatives in the Competition, the School’s Music Instructor and team Lead, Mr. Israel Olorundare, said the performances have once again showcased the musical excellence and talent of Premiere Academy students beyond the four walls of the academy.

Olorundare thanked the School Management and other members of staff for their dedication, support and guidance that contributed significantly to the outstanding achievement.

CBCP calls for 2nd collection at June 14 masses for earthquake victims

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) on Tuesday asked all bishops to authorize a second collection during Sunday masses on June 14 for the victims of the deadly earthquake in Mindanao.

In a statement, CBCP President Archbishop Gilbert Garcera said they express solidarity with the victims and grieve with the families who lost loved ones. ‘I appeal to all bishops to authorize a second collection in their respective dioceses during the Sunday Masses of June 14, 2026. The proceeds of this collection may be transmitted through the diocesan social action centers and Caritas Philippines to support the emergency relief and rehabilitation efforts for our affected brothers and sisters,’ he added.

Caritas Philippines is the humanitarian, development, and advocacy arm of the CBCP, headed by Bishop Gerardo Alminaza.

Garcera said the Church cannot be indifferent to the suffering of the affected residents, emphasizing that moments like this are a reminder ‘that the Church is called to be a sign of hope and a witness of charity.’

He requested all dioceses and religious communities across the country to offer a special Prayer of the Faithful during all masses next Sunday for the victims of the earthquake and those tasked with relief and rescue efforts.

‘May the Lord Jesus, who calmed the storm and strengthened those who were afraid, grant comfort to those who mourn, healing to the injured, protection to those in danger, and courage to all who are extending help. Through the maternal intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, may our people find strength, consolation, and hope amid this calamity,’ Garcera said.

A magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck off the coast of Maasim, Sarangani, at 7:37 a.m. on June 8. Tsunami warnings were initially issued for the Philippines but were later lifted.

According to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, the earthquake has killed 37 individuals and injured 479 as of Tuesday.

Based on the agency’s figures, 33 deaths, 456 injuries, and four missing persons were recorded in the Soccsksargen (South Cotabato, Cotabato, Sultan Kudarat, Sarangani, and General Santos City), while four deaths and 23 injuries were reported in the Davao region. /mcm

Sandiganbayan junks graft case vs ex-reclamation chief Agra

The Sandiganbayan Third Division has junked the graft case against a former Philippine Reclamation Authority (PRA) chairperson regarding the alleged violation of a contractual clause.

This was the outcome of the anti-graft court division’s move to grant the demurrer to evidence filed by Alberto Collantes Agra on Jan. 26, 2026 for the dismissal of his case under Republic Act (RA) No. 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.

The case arose from the execution of three memoranda of agreement (MOA) between PRA and Bacoor City in 2021 regarding the reclamation projects, despite the claimed right of first refusal (ROFR) of Cavite Holdings Inc (CHI) and the Province of Cavite. An ROFR refers to a contractual clause that guarantees a party the opportunity to purchase an asset before the other party could sell it to someone else.

The same reclaimed area in PRA and Bacoor City’s MOA was alleged to be a subject of a ROFR clause pursuant under the joint venture agreement of PRA and Malaysian firms Majlis Amanah Rakyat and Renong Berhad, according to the Office of the Ombudsman prosecutors.

State prosecutors then accused Agra of manifest partiality, evident bad faith and/or gross excusable negligence by allowing the reclamation project to proceed despite the existing ROFR clause.

In a resolution penned by Associate Justice Ronald Moreno promulgated on June 5, he noted that there are three grounds for graft conviction: first, if the accused is a public official; second, if he acted with manifest partiality, or evident bad faith, and/or gross inexcusable negligence; and, third, if their action caused undue injury to the government or unwarranted benefits to a private party.

‘The first element is present,’ Moreno wrote in the resolution. ‘However, upon review of the records, the court finds that the prosecution failed to prove the second and third elements.’

The court said the evidence is insufficient to establish that Agra represented, directed, and instructed the execution of the three MOAs. A plain reading of the MOAs stated that the PRA was represented by its General Manager Janilo Rubiato, while Agra only signed as a witness.

The prosecution also said that PRA, under Rubiato, could not enter into the MOA without Agra’s concurrence. However, PRA rules state that the authority to approve the execution of the MOAs lies with the PRA Governing Board as a collegial body, not with the chairperson alone.

‘Failure to establish that he (Agra) committed these acts precludes a finding of manifest partiality, evident bad faith, or gross inexcusable negligence under Section 3(e) of R.A. No. 3019,’ the resolution said. ‘The second element is therefore absent.’

‘Similarly, as it was not proven that Agra committed the acts imputed to him, he could not have given any unwarranted benefit, preference, or advantage to the City of Bacoor and its reclamation partners, nor caused undue injury to the Province of Cavite or CHI. Thus, the third element is also absent,’ it continued.

In a separate concurring opinion, Associate Justice Karl Miranda, Third Division chairperson, raised that the present criminal case is not the appropriate opportunity to settle the validity of the ROFR clause of CHI.

But still, Miranda said the parties should seek a definitive legal ruling on the issue of the ROFR.

Miranda then issued a ‘strong reprimand’ against the parties for seeking administrative opinions from the Office of the Government Counsel (OGCC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) instead of filing an appropriate case before the courts.

The OGCC and DOJ has repeatedly recognized the ROFR clause in this case.

Associate Justice Fritz Bryn Delos Santos also issued a separate concurring opinion, noting that Agra, in his official capacity as chairperson, cannot be expected to also be knowledgeable of PRA’s daily operations, including the OGCC and DOJ opinion on the ROFR.

Delos Santos said the prosecutors only relied on presumption of knowledge without concrete evidence that Agra should have known the OGCC and DOJ opinions. /das

Oyo’s tragedy and Nigeria’s security crisis: Why we must stop counting victims by faith alone

The abduction of scores of pupils and teachers in Oyo State should trouble every Nigerian conscience. It is another painful proof that insecurity has become our greatest threat to national stability, social cohesion, and future prosperity. Beyond the immediate anguish of affected families, this incident compels us to confront a broader reality: Nigeria’s security crisis is now a truly national challenge that cannot be understood through narrow regional, ethnic, or religious lenses. Like millions of Nigerians, I feel deep sorrow for the children torn from their families, the teachers seized while performing their duty, and the parents enduring the agony of uncertainty. Every child deserves the safety of a classroom. Every parent deserves the assurance that a child sent to school will return home. The violation of that trust is one of the gravest crimes any society can endure.

Yet as we mourn, we must also resist the temptation to draw conclusions that obscure rather than illuminate the crisis. When I say we must stop counting victims by faith alone, I do not mean that all regions have suffered equally. That would be false. Data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project and the Nigeria Security Tracker show that between 2018 and 2025, the North East and North West accounted for over 75 per cent of all banditry-related fatalities. Within those zones, rural farming and herding communities-regardless of their religious affiliation-have endured violence at staggering rates. Acknowledging this disparity is not ranking suffering. It is basic diagnosis. If we refuse to see where the bleeding is worst, we cannot allocate resources or design tailored responses. Equal compassion does not require equal analysis.

The perpetrators in Oyo likely targeted vulnerable children without caring about the faith of their victims. That is true at the tactical level. But it is strategically misleading to treat all violence as identical. The North East’s insurgency is driven by long-standing extremist ideologies from Boko Haram and ISWAP. The North West’s banditry is fuelled by pastoralist-farmer conflicts, small-arms flows from the Sahel, the collapse of rural governance, and the economic lure of kidnapping for ransom. South West kidnappings, while horrific, are largely criminal enterprises seeking profit, not ideological conquest. These differences matter. A counter-terrorism strategy that works for Borno may be useless in Zamfara. A policy that addresses grazing routes and rural livelihoods may reduce conflict in the North Central but does nothing to stop a criminal gang on the Ibadan-Oyo road. We need region-specific solutions, not a one-size-fits-all lament. Recognising this does not fragment our national resolve; it sharpens it.

For years, communities across the North East and North West bore the brunt of atrocities-mass killings, kidnapping, rape, arson, forced displacement. Those events were reported, but they often failed to generate the sustained national attention they deserved. The consequence was not merely inadequate sympathy. It was a dangerous underestimation of the threat itself. Too many Nigerians viewed insecurity in distant communities as somebody else’s problem. Too many assumed that violence confined to one region would remain there. The events in Oyo should finally dispel that illusion.

But sympathy alone has never caught a bandit. Consider this: no matter how remote the forest or how deep the night, a group of dozens-or even hundreds-of abducted children and their armed captors cannot simply vanish into thin air. They must traverse roads, cross villages, pass through farmlands, and navigate checkpoints. Communities along these routes see them. They hear the engines, the footsteps, the voices. So why does no one speak? The answer is painful and stark: fear. In too many parts of Nigeria, those who report suspicious movements become the next targets. Informants are killed. Their families are threatened. Their homes are burned. The silence of communities is not complicity; it is survival. Until we guarantee the safety of citizens who volunteer information, the eyes and ears of the nation will remain shut by terror.

This brings me to a subject too often avoided in polite security discourse: the political economy of banditry and the paradox of technological silence. Former Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai (retd.), has repeatedly stated that Nigeria possesses the technological means-satellite surveillance, signal intelligence, drone reconnaissance, and advanced tracking systems-to know where both victims and captors are at any given moment. Our military and other security agencies are among the best trained on the continent. If that is true, and I have no reason to doubt a man of his rank and experience, then the failure to locate and rescue abducted citizens is not a failure of hardware. It is a failure of will, coordination, and political courage. We have the maps. We have the tools. We have the men. What we seem to lack is the decisive command to use them.

No honest analysis of Nigeria’s insecurity can ignore that banditry is a business. Powerful local and national figures have historically financed, protected, or negotiated with criminal networks for electoral gain, ransom profits, or strategic convenience. Security budgets have been looted for decades, leaving soldiers without pay, ammunition, or morale. It is not enough to call for ‘better inter-agency coordination’ and ‘judicial efficiency.’ Those are technocratic placebos if we refuse to ask harder questions. Who is arming the bandits? Who is buying their stolen cattle? Who ensures that high-profile kidnappers are never brought to trial? And why, with all our technology, do we still wait for weeks before rescue operations begin? Until we answer these questions, no amount of surveillance equipment will save a single child.

What, then, must be done differently? First, the government must publish, annually, a disaggregated security dashboard showing fatalities, kidnappings, and displacements by local government area, by known perpetrator group, and by proximate cause-whether ideology, resource conflict, or organised crime. Transparency is the enemy of denial. Second, a special anti-corruption tribunal for security procurement and elite complicity should be established, with powers to investigate and prosecute past and present officials. Without this, every new weapon bought will find its way into bandit hands. Third, community policing must be rebuilt from the ground up, with locally recruited officers who live in the areas they serve, backed by independent oversight to prevent abuse. Intelligence sharing only works when informants believe they will be protected-and when they see that technology is actually being used to rescue, not just to monitor. Fourth, the international community must stop simplifying Nigeria’s crisis into a single religious-persecution narrative, which serves foreign domestic politics more than our security. At the same time, Nigerian civil society must stop treating every attack as an opportunity for ethnic or partisan point-scoring. Criminals thrive when we fight each other.

The children abducted in Oyo are not merely Oyo’s children. They are Nigerian children. Their suffering should concern every citizen. But let us not pretend that the agony of a family in Oyo is identical to that of a family in Gwoza that has been displaced four times in six years, or a community in Zamfara that pays protection fees to bandits every month. Recognising difference is not division. It is the beginning of justice. We will overcome this crisis not by refusing to count victims, but by counting them accurately-by region, by cause, by frequency-and then acting on what the numbers tell us. And we will act effectively only when communities lose their fear, when technology is matched by political will, and when the state proves that it values Nigerian lives more than it fears exposing Nigerian elites. The tears of parents in Oyo must not become another passing headline. They must become a national demand for hard answers, not just hard feelings.

Mindanao quake death toll rises to 37; Tent city eyed

The death toll from the magnitude 7.8 earthquake that struck off Sarangani in Mindanao rose to 37 as of Tuesday morning, June 9, the Office of Civil Defense said.

OCD data as of 6 a.m. recorded 33 deaths in Region 12 and four in Region 11. Most of the fatalities were caused by falling debris, Civil Defense spokesperson Junie Castillo said in an interview on GMA News’ “Unang Balita.”

In Region 12 alone, 456 people were injured while four remained missing, based on initial reports.

“There are four who are still missing, but again, this is initial data because we are looking at reports from families or from people looking for someone,” Castillo said in Filipino.

A total of 77,186 people, or 17,689 families, were affected by the earthquake.

Damage to roads, bridges, homes

Castillo said nine bridges collapsed and 19 roads were damaged in Region 12 alone, with infrastructure damage estimated at around P900 million.

At least 1,889 houses were also damaged, including about 1,500 that were totally destroyed.

Castillo said it was still unclear how long recovery and rehabilitation would take because of the severity of the damage.

“On recovery and rehabilitation in terms of infrastructure, the damage was severe. We can see in images that many buildings collapsed. Even if some did not totally collapse, we can see that they were still heavily damaged and are unusable,” Castillo said.

Response

Search, rescue and retrieval operations are focused mainly on the hardest-hit areas of General Santos City and Sarangani, although Castillo said responders have also been deployed to other quake-affected areas.

General Santos City was placed under a state of calamity on Monday.

Castillo said the OCD had not received reports of isolated barangays or communities so far.

“We have not received reports of isolated barangays, although we have seen damaged bridges and roads,” Castillo said.

Food, non-food items and water supplies placed in accessible areas remain sufficient for now, Castillo said.

The OCD has also sent fuel supplies and generators to hospitals as power transmission lines have yet to be restored.

General Santos Airport was also damaged, forcing flights to be canceled or rerouted. Castillo said government officials visiting affected areas had to travel by land or take a helicopter from Davao City to General Santos City.

The OCD is also planning to set up a tent city for residents who have been sleeping by the roadside because they cannot yet return to their homes due to damage, fear and aftershocks.

“We are looking at putting up one tent city. In this situation, especially with aftershocks, our fellow Filipinos cannot immediately return to their homes, so they are staying in open spacess,” Castillo said.

Hybrid job fair JobQuestPH returns this June with more local, overseas opportunities

Job seekers looking for new career opportunities can look forward to the upcoming JobQuestPH Hybrid Job Fair Marketplace, happening from June 16 to 20, featuring hundreds of local and overseas job openings from participating employers across various industries.

The event will begin with a two-day Face-to-Face Job Fair on June 16 and 17 at the Activity Center of Ayala Malls Manila Bay from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.

This will be followed by a three-day Virtual Job Fair from June 18 to 20, accessible through the JobQuestPH Virtual Convention Center at www.jobquest.ph.

Designed to provide greater accessibility and convenience for job seekers, the hybrid format allows applicants to participate either onsite or online.

Attendees will have the opportunity to explore vacancies, meet recruiters, submit applications, and discover career opportunities from both local and overseas employers.

One of the event’s key highlights is the free AI Job Matching Assessment, available to all registered attendees. The assessment helps applicants identify career opportunities that best match their skills, experience, and career interests, allowing them to make more informed job application decisions.

The JobQuestPH Hybrid Job Fair Marketplace welcomes fresh graduates, experienced professionals, career shifters and first-time job seekers who are looking to advance their careers or explore new opportunities.

The event is organized by JobQuestPH in full partnership with PESO Parañaque and the City Government of Parañaque, and in cooperation with the Department of Labor and Employment, Department of Migrant Workers and Technical Education and Skills Development Authority.

Interested applicants are encouraged to pre-register through www.jobquest.ph to enjoy fast lane access during the onsite event and gain access to the Virtual Job Fair platform.

With multiple hiring companies, local and overseas opportunities and innovative career-matching technology, the JobQuestPH Hybrid Job Fair Marketplace aims to connect thousands of Filipino job seekers with their next career opportunity.

Insecurity: Sending Orunmila and Ogun to the president

I don’t know who divines for the President. I also don’t know who his prophets and marabouts are. But I wish to commend President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to what Orunmila did when Death (Ikú), Sickness (Àrùn) Contention (Ìjà) and Loss (Òfò) waged a war of attrition against Otù-Ifè, where the Father of Divination lived at his Òkè Ìgètì home.

To overcome the problem, Ifá, through Ogbè Òtúrá, asked Orunmila to let go of his favourites such as: Eku méjì olúwéré (two smart rats), Eja méjì abìwègbàdà (Two big fish), Òbídìe méjì abèdò lùkélùké (two ovulating hens), Ewúré méjì abùmu rederédé (two heavily pregnant goats) and Elílá méjì tó f’ìwo s’òsùká (two big cows with big pad-like horns).

In the place of those fanciful items, Orunmila was asked to accept only obì mérin (four kolanuts), orógbó mérin (four bitter kola), and ataare mérin (four alligator pepper) as sacrificial items from his clients. Àgbonìrègún (another name for Orunmila) did as he was told and he overcame his enemies. Leaders must sacrifice personal fantasies for their societies to thrive.

Unless President Tinubu is ready to make allowance for governance instead of politics, kidnappers will enter homes in Ibadan, Abuja and Port Harcourt to take citizens as hostages. Until the political class places a premium on the security and wellbeing of the common man above their political ambitions, our children will not be secure in their schools, our highways will be a haven for bandits and terrorists will occupy our farmlands and ruin our harvest!

The Nigerian singer and songwriter, Simisola Bolatito Kosoko, popularly known as Simi, in what I term here as a dirge for the living, released a short song for the kidnapped Oyo school children. In the dirge, she says: Adìe kìí ta omo rè fún oúnje (the hen does not sell her chicks for food). Unfortunately, this is what the President and the his brothers and sisters in politics are doing to Nigerians: feeding the people’s safety to the gods of their political ambitions!

In the pantheon of Yoruba gods, Ògún, is in charge of war and iron. Originally from a now-extinct town known as Àpá, Ògún was the town’s lead warrior. He was endowed with all natural abilities to defend the town and he fought so many battles on behalf of Àpá and won.

At the beginning of his reign as the generalissimo of Àpá, the wise men who divined for Ògún warned him against nursing an inordinate ambition. They told him that the consequences of disobedience would be too grave for him. If he allowed ambition to take him out of Àpá, he would come back to meet a ruined town. And that is if he would ever come back. Ifá does not lie; Òpèlè does not engage in falsehood (Ifá kìí paró; Òpèlè kìí sè›ké), is the saying of our sages.

Ògún obeyed the diviners for a while. He did all he could to limit his influence to the army he led successfully. But one day, something told him that he could conquer other lands. His orí inú (inner mind) told him to leave Àpá to become lord of other towns and villages. The spirit said he could even rule over the entire world. Ògún chose to believe his orí inú.

Ògún forgot the warning of Ifá. He left Àpá without informing Alápa, the king of the town. A few of his soldiers followed him on the journey to nowhere. Along the line, he conquered towns and villages. He established kingdoms and vassal states. He made rulers and dethroned a few. His expedition was a huge success.

A man’s hubris follows him wherever he goes, is the saying of the elders. Ògún was no exception. His greatest flaw is raw, undiluted anger. When seized by fury, nothing was too precious for him not to destroy.

One day, Ògún returned from another of his numerous unprovoked wars to discover that soldiers left behind in the camp failed to prepare his meal. Enraged, he slaughtered them all. The soldiers who had accompanied him to the battlefield were appalled by the senseless brutality and voiced their indignation. In a fresh outburst of fury, Ògún turned on them as well and killed every one of them.

By the time he came to his senses, he discovered that he had no one to rule over. Then he wandered off and eventually arrived at an àbétè (a local drinking joint) in what is now present day Ìre Èkìtì. The revellers noticed his presence but paid him no attention, carrying on with their jokes, laughter and merriment. Ògún observed what he considered their ‹impudence› but chose to overlook it. He also noticed that the seemingly ‹rude› drinking party had not offered him palm wine. That, too, he let pass.

Just within earshot, someone cracked a joke. His friends laughed out loud. Ògún heard the laughter. He became enraged. Blinded by anger, he returned to the drinking party. He slaughtered all of them. Only one sober drinker escaped because the rest were already intoxicated.

Done, Ògún made for the gourd of palm wine. He lifted it to pour himself the content. To his shock, the gourd was empty! It was then he realised that he had committed multiple murder for an empty gourd of palm wine! His senses came back. He decided never to wander again. He struck his sword to the ground and fell on it. The one who escaped came back with the men of Ìrè to behold the gory scene! The place Ògún died turned to a shrine to date. This is why many believe that Ògún was an indigene of Ìrè and hence, the saying: Ògún Onírè (Ògún the king or owner of Ìrè).

What became of Àpá? Shortly after Ògún left with his soldiers, the towns he had earlier conquered seized the opportunity and rebelled. They waged several wars of attrition against the town and brought Àpá to its knees.

Àpá was in that ruinous position when an old Babalawo, named Ológbòjígòlò, came on an itinerary divination mission to the town. The old wise man was appalled at the state of things in Àpá. He located the king, Alápa, and offered to help.

For a while, Ológbòjígòlò did all he could and Àpá became great once more. But, he too, forgot what Ifá told him when he ventured out. He was warned not to eat over-ripe kola and not to marry two wives no matter how rich he became. When Àpá became prosperous again, Ológbòjígòlò became too comfortable and went against the injunctions of Ifá. In the process, he leaked the secret of Àpá’s victories on the battlefield to his new wife, who actually was a spy for the enemy.

The last battle Ológbòjígòlò fought on behalf of Àpá was the last that was heard about the town. The town was razed to its foundation and all the survivors taken into slavery, never to return! Àpá went into extinction. Its story is only told in Odù Ifá (Ifá Corpus) known as Ìròsùn Mejì, as narrated above. Ifá›s prophecy to Ògún came to pass. When a generalissimo becomes too ambitious, his homestead will come to ruin. When leaders have the mentality of self-first, the people perish under their watch!

The last one week has been tough for the entire South-West. From the videos of ‘suspected bandits’ and ‘arrested bandits and kidnapper’ making the rounds on social media, it is clear that the entire Yorubaland is under siege! No part of the region is spared; nowhere in Káàróò oòjíire land is safe anymore.

I saw the video from Ikorodu. Another one from Lagos Island was uploaded. In Oka Akoko, Ondo State, the narrator said some bandits were mesmerised by a local hunter. Somewhere in Ekiti, a suspected ‹bandit informant’ was apprehended by the people. Osogbo and Ikirun had their own share, just as Ogun State was not spared. From Ile Oluji to Okitipupa in Ondo State, nobody sleeps peacefully again. Fear pervades the land.

What we thought would not afflict us is now our common malady. The North appears relatively ‘peaceful’ now as kidnappers have shifted attention to the South, such that in Ibadan, the capital of Oyo State, a mother and her two children were kidnapped and housed among neighbours. It took almost five days before the police got the ‘intelligence’ that led to the ‘rescue!’

In all this, our Ògún, the one they said is the father of all strategists, is the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. Yes, President Bola Tinubu was not elected to protect only Yorubaland. He is not the President of the South-West, but of the entire nation. I called him the Yoruba Ògún here because his members of the Alajobi gang said that after the popular Agege bread, the next best thing that has ever happened to the entire Yoruba race is Tinubu!

But like Ògún, who abandoned his hometown, Àpá, the current generalissimo in the Aso Rock Villa has abandoned everyone for politics. Ifá warned Ògún about the consequences of over ambition. Òpèlè too cautioned Ológbòjígòlò on the danger of marrying two wives and eating over-ripe kolanut when life becomes too comfortable for him.

The two legends, like the Babalawos of old are wont to say: wón p’awo lékèé, wón p’Èsù lólè; wón wo òrun yànyàn bí eni tí kò níí kú, wón ko’tí ògboìn s›ébo (they call the diviner falsehood, they call esu- the trickster- thief; they look at the heaven contemptuously as if they will never die, they turn deaf ears to the prescribed sacrifice by Ifá). Their ends were not palatable.

Ògún died in a foreign land, his identity is still unknown to date, while his homestead is extinct. Though Ológbòjígòlò, through metaphysics, escaped death, the town he once defended was razed, the king beheaded and the people taken into permanent slavery! This is what over-ambition does; this is what happens when the leader’s personal interest overrides the health of the State.

President Tinubu is entitled to a second term in office. Nobody denies that. Nobody interrogates his constitutional right to seek the mandate of the people for a second term. But that should not be at the expense of governance. The president’s ambition should not override the good of the common people. What we are experiencing in terms of acute insecurity in the nation today is because the President and the political class have abdicated governance for politics!

The idea that Tinubu does not have the capacity to tackle insecurity will not fly. The notion that Nigeria lacks the capacity (men and material) to get out of the woods remains eternally false. What is lacking is the political willpower. The priority of the President is the main issue. If today, the President says the people’s welfare and wellbeing come first, insecurity will be a thing of the past! If he does that, his lieutenants, the governors, will take a cue; they will follow suit.

It has been 25 days since the children and teachers in the Oriire area of Oyo State were taken into captivity. The Ekiti church worshippers are more than a month old in the captivity of those who snatched them from the Sanctuary of the Lord. From Zamfara to Kebbi; from Katsina to Niger, Nigerians, in their thousands, are being held by bandits, terrorists and kidnappers. The focus of the President and the entire political class is the 2027 general elections. This is where the problem lies.

I watched the video of the retired Army spokesman, Major General Rabe Abubakar and his wife, as released by those felons who ‘captured’ them in Katsina, the penultimate week. I could imagine what was going on in the mind of the man who rose to that enviable rank in the military as he was being humiliated! The shame of the helpless condition he found himself in was written all over him. Here is a man, who, at his wedding, was given the sword to defend his wife but he is being humiliated to beg for his life in the presence of the woman he was commissioned to defend!

General Abubakar (Rtd) is not alone. Many victims are suffering the same fate in the various forests where they are held hostage! If a General, whether retired or in service becomes so vulnerable that a rag-tag army can hold him captive, the rest of us, ‘bloody civilians’, have become easily dispensable! Many women who were once victims of kidnapping don’t live to tell their ordeals while in captivity. Many passed on because they could not imagine the molestation they suffered at the hands of the ruffians that kidnapped them! This is the problem the Commander-in-Chief was elected to tackle. How the President and his fellow politicians still sleep and dream politics while the citizenry waste away beats my imagination.

Nigeria: A tale of a defenceless nation

How did the giant of Africa become a land where fear now travels faster than hope? How did a nation that once led peacekeeping missions across West Africa become a country pleading for peace within its own borders?

This is the tale of my country.

Green. White. Green.

A flag that once inspired pride now flutters over communities haunted by insurgency, banditry, kidnapping, and bloodshed. How did this menace evolve from isolated crimes into a thriving industry an economy of fear, a marketplace of human suffering?

A friend once told me that in today’s Nigeria, the fastest route to wealth is no longer hard work, innovation, or enterprise, but politics, banditry, and kidnapping. I dismissed it then. Today, I struggle to dismiss the evidence before me

A nation with millions of restless youths and millions more out of school has become fertile ground for manipulation, recruitment, and despair. A nation blessed with abundant resources has somehow become cursed by the greed of a few.

Corruption has become the backbone of our insecurity.

It feeds the monster that devours our communities. It weakens our institutions. It turns public trust into private profit. It transforms national tragedies into lucrative enterprises. Every naira stolen from public service becomes another brick in the fortress of insecurity.

Today, innocent children wake up in the morning, put on their school uniforms, and unknowingly walk into danger. Their only crime is seeking an education. Children as young as two years old find themselves in captivity, trapped in the dens of kidnappers while their families agonise

Across our land, mothers cry themselves to sleep. Fathers sell everything they own to pay ransom. Communities live under siege. Schools are abandoned. Farms are deserted. Hope itself is becoming a scarce commodity.

Meanwhile, politics marches on.

Campaigns are being planned. Alliances are being negotiated. Re-election ambitions are being nurtured while ordinary citizens bury their dead and pray not to be next.

Nigeria bleeds.

And yet, the bloodletting continues.

The painful truth is that no foreign nation can love Nigeria more than Nigerians. No outside force can build the country we refuse to build ourselves. Heaven helps those who help themselves, and history teaches that nations are saved not by miracles alone but by courageous citizens demanding accountability, justice, and good governance.

My beloved country, which way forward?

Must we continue to normalize the abnormal?

Must we continue to celebrate mediocrity while excellence suffers?

Must we continue to reward failure and expect progress?

Nigeria is standing at a crossroads between renewal and decline. The choice before us is not merely political; it is moral. It is a choice between accountability and impunity, between nation building and self destruction.

The tears in our eyes today must become the determination in our hearts tomorrow.

For despite the darkness, I still believe that Nigeria can rise again.

But only when corruption ceases to be our national creed and integrity becomes our collective covenant.

Only then shall Green, White, Green once again stand for peace, prosperity, and hope.

Written with tears in my eyes and hope in my heart.

Soldier killed, villagers abducted in Ogun community

A soldier was yesterday killed, another injured and some villagers allegedly kidnapped after gunmen attacked an Ogun community.

The incident occurred at Karanla in the Magbon Etido area of Mowe, Ogun State.

The attackers, suspected to be kidnappers, were said to have shot the soldier at a private dredging site where he was providing security.

Sources alleged that they had attempted to kidnap an expatriate at the site who narrawly escaped but other workers there were not that fortunate.

According to Mowe/Ibafo community on X, the criminals, allegedly abducted many residents in Karanla community before they were confronted by the soldiers.

Sadly, one of the soldiers was killed during exchange of gunfire while another one sustained injuries, posted the page which shared video evidence of the incident.

It was gathered that reinforcement was immediately deployed to the area to restore normalcy.

Sources alleged that some of the kidnapped victims escaped from the criminals during exchange of gunfire with security forces, while efforts were intensified to track the culprits and rescue remaining hostages.

The incident caused panic in the area with residents alleging that it was suspected bandits that invaded the community.

But the Ogun State Police Command in a statement last night, dispelled the claim, describing the incident as an isolated criminal attack.

A statement by the spokesman for the command, DSP Oluseyi Babaseyi said the injured soldier was receiving treatment, adding that security operatives responded swiftly to the incident, with police and military personnel launching a joint operation to track down and arrest those responsible.

‘The security incident recorded at a private dredging site in Magbon Etido, Mowe, was an isolated criminal attack and not a bandit operation as being speculated in some quarters.

‘Following the report, police operatives, in collaboration with the military, swiftly mobilised to the area and commenced coordinated operations to apprehend those responsible.

‘Preliminary findings do not indicate any connection between the incident and banditry activities in Ogun State. Investigations and tactical operations remain ongoing,’ he said.

The police assured residents that the situation had been brought under control, noting that security presence in the area had been reinforced to prevent further attacks.

The command urged members of the public to remain calm and continue with their lawful activities, assuring that efforts were underway to apprehend the attackers and ensure the safety of residents.