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Killing Of Soldiers: How Okuama Women, Children Trapped Without Food For 6 Days
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Hundreds of women and children of Okuama community, Ewu Kingdom, in Ughelli South Local Government Area, Delta State, who fled for their dear lives when troops of the Nigerian Army started flattening the community over the killing of 16 soldiers last Friday have been stranded for six days without food in the forests.
This is even as a young man from one of the warring communities, suspected to be a militant, dared the Federal Government to declare him wanted in a viral video yesterday, saying the soldiers were killed because they allowed commanding persons to use them to oppress the people of Okuama.
At the coastal town of Igbomotoru in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, the siege imposed by troops on the manhunt for a militant leader suspected to have masterminded the killings is pushing the community towards starvation. It could trigger a humanitarian crisis if it persisted.
Some days ago, the Okuama women cried out that they fled into the forests when soldiers allegedly opened fire on the villagers in the town hall after the community refused their attempt to take away the community leaders.
As of yesterday, Okuama is out of bounds as only the military could enter in and out of the town. The place is deserted, the state governor, Rt. Hon Sheriff Oborevwori confirmed he could not visit the place because of the situation.
Vanguard learned that the neighboring communities to the abandoned Okuama refused to accept the fleeing residents as refugees in their homelands because of the persecution by soldiers, who come around searching for the perpetrators of the heinous crime.
Because of how they escaped into the forests, the women could not take food items with them, and they could not return to the community either, as soldiers had taken over the town.
One indigene of a bordering community in the Ewu Kingdom said the situation of the victims of the military onslaught on culprits of the Okuama killings was pitiable.
“Hunger is taking a toll on them, especially the children they are carrying. This is a humanitarian crisis, and the government has to open a refugee camp for these people and provide them with food.
“Soldiers molest innocent people in neighboring communities of Okuama in Ughelli South Local Government Area. As I am speaking with you, soldiers are still in the Orere community in the Ewu kingdom, molesting innocent people in the search for perpetrators.
“The fact is that neighboring communities of Okuama in the Ewu Kingdom are not receiving fleeing indigenes of Okuama, who are mostly women and children, for fear of harassment and molestation by the military.
“As we speak, neighboring communities are living in fear because the military has set up drones watching over all communities”.
A resident of the Orere community said that people in neighboring communities have had sleepless nights over the presence of soldiers in their domains.
“We are having sleepless nights over what happened at Okuama because the military is after the perpetrators fleeing from the scene of the incident. To be candid, nobody is happy over what happened to the soldiers at Okuama.
“But, the issue has degenerated, and we are all affected. They would come to your community, brutalizing innocent people over their onslaught of fleeing perpetrators.
“I want to use this medium to call on the federal government to consider setting up refugee camps for women and children displaced from the Okuama community, which nobody wants to accommodate because of the fear of the rampaging soldiers in neighboring communities.
“This is a clarion call on the Federal Government to save these victims. The government should set up Internally Displaced Persons, IDP, camps to accommodate these vulnerable victims so they can be identified and avoid the harassment of neighboring communities.
“I want to conclude by saying that nobody supports the killing of soldiers at Okuama, and the federal government should do something to save these innocent victims”.
Some concerned indigenes of Igbomotuoru, who spoke to Vanguard, called on the relevant authorities to prevail on the troops to relax restrictions on free movement in and out of the community to allow the people to pick up the pieces of their lives.
Igbomotoru has been under military lockdown since last Sunday by troops in pursuit of militants allegedly behind the killing of some soldiers in Okuama, Ughelli South local government area of Delta State.
Many lives were reportedly lost during the Sunday morning invasion of Igbomotoru, with houses used by the militants razed.
According to local sources, the usually lively community is now a show of its old self; shops are shut down, and many of the natives who fled their homes are still taking refuge in the forest, while some relocated to other communities before the present lockdown in the area.
People cannot come into the community with goods and foodstuffs, and those trapped cannot leave the area.
It was, however, learned that the few persons in the community, especially the old, who could not run away are being denied access to their farms and fishing traps, a development informed sources said could trigger famine, as the people are facing hunger caused by restriction in movement.
Many are disturbed that five days after the invasion, no government official has visited the area to sympathize with the people or send relief materials to ameliorate their sufferings.
Access to food and water in the area is diminishing due to the military blockade, a source lamented, noting that the people may be compelled to source water from the polluted river.
“If two sachets of water are being sold for N50 in Yenagoa, you can imagine what it will cost at Igbomotoru where people are not allowed in and out. You can imagine what the local people are going through,” our source added.
A man who abandoned his wife in the village and escaped with two kids told our correspondent from his hideout that he trekked all through the day and night backing one of his kids and carrying the other on his shoulder through the forest to neighboring Tebideba, but that they were denied stay by the people for fear that soldiers may also invade their community.
“I trekked for one and half days through the thick of the forest, running away from the invading soldiers with one child strapped on my back and another lifted on my shoulder. I left my wife behind in that moment of confusion.
“When we got to Tebideba, I thought relief had come, but we were denied a stay by the people who said they did not want to have an issue with the military. Understating their fear, given the tense situation in the area, we had to return to the forest and continue our search for succor until we saw somebody paddling a canoe and pleading for assistance.
“The Good Samaritan paddled us to the boundary with the Sangana community, and there we got another lift through a local canoe to Sangana, from where we boarded a boat and left. You can imagine carrying two kids for one and a half days trekking through the thick forest, using the sun as a guide.
“It was just by the grace of God that we escaped. My worry now is about my wife, particularly, as I have been unable to reach her on the phone since I fled the town.”
Lamenting the plight of the people, an environmentalist, Alagoa Morris, who is also from the Southern Ijaw local government area, urged the authorities to protect the law-abiding people of the community, saying, “With the restriction in Igbomotoru, a situation where nobody is allowed to go about, our people’s traditional means of livelihood – ‘fishing and farming’ the people may die of hunger, if not by a bullet.”
“The federal and state authorities should step in and save the lives of law-abiding Nigerians in the community. Even in the ongoing war in Gaza, humanitarian workers are going in with drugs, food, and water, while criminals should pay for their crimes. The innocent citizens should enjoy the protection of the law.”
Also, a community leader and former councilor who represented Igbomotoru in the Southern Ijaw legislative council, Hon Ayebatari Easterday, said: “Although I am not at Igbomotoru, whatever information I am giving is not an eyewitness account of what has befallen my people but I have people who give me a report on daily basis.”
“I have been their representative as a councilor; they have confidence in me; they send the daily occurrence of the invasion of the community by armed soldiers. As of this morning, nobody living in the community can travel out, and nobody outside can also travel to the community.
“When I got the first report, I intended to go home and see how my people can be saved and how I can counsel them on ways of relating with the government, and particularly the security agencies. Several lives have been lost, but my appeal to everybody is to remain calm.
“As of yesterday, I talked to some government functionaries, and they said the government is on top of the matter to see how peace can return. Several people cannot be accounted for, and many people who ran into the forest are yet to be seen.
“They could have died of hunger in the forest. The children with no parents to cater to them may also die of starvation in the community.
“Our mothers are now helpless in the community and cannot go to their farms, and you know the source of livelihood in our communities is fishing and farming. They do not even have access to food anymore.
“Those who have shops cannot open not to talk of people coming to buy. When you cannot go fishing and farming- the only source of money to buy food to feed the family, these are some of the predicaments my people are passing through.
“The soldiers could have acted out provocation, but the beginning of every action determines the end. They should put their legs in the shoes of the community. Some of the victims are people who committed no offense.
“My candid appeal to the government headed by Senator Douye Diri and assisted by his capable deputy, Senator Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo is to ensure that relief materials are timely sent to the people.
“These our brothers and sisters have no food to eat and water to drink, and you know that we live in an environment where the water is so polluted that they do not drink from it.
“These people have been helpless and could be forced to drink from the polluted river where they defecate, where the polluted oil flows, and also there could be another incident of unhealthy living for the people of the area.”
In the viral video, the militant claimed that Okuama and Okoloba communities were having a land dispute but some Ijaw people empowered by the federal government used the army to escort and carry out their crude oil business but decided to betray their brothers.
He disclosed they used soldiers to ‘carry’ three people and slaughtered them, adding, “The day the soldiers were killed, they came to carry our community leaders, and the youth knew that once the community leaders were captured, they would be powerless.”
From his explanation, they killed the soldiers to stop them from taking away the community leaders and making the youths ineffective.
“That is why the action took place – some people said the soldiers came for peacekeeping. Point of correction – no army came for peacekeeping. They are fighting in support of somebody (names withheld) who ordered them to do so.
“This is my last video; my father is a retired army captain; he died last year, and I have lost over six of my friends and relatives in Nigeria.
“So if you like, take the matter to the next level. If they like, let the Federal Government declare me wanted, I am proud of it. You people are saying show my face; if I show my face, what will you do to me.”
News
Reps Endorse Nigerian-Born UK Nominee Dapo Akande for ICJ Seat
By Gloria Ikibah
The House of Representatives has thrown its weight behind Professor Dapo Akande, the Nigerian-born candidate nominated by the United Kingdom for election to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for the 2027–2036 term.
The endorsement was announced on Wednesday by the Deputy Speaker of the House, Rt Hon. Benjamin Okezie Kalu, during a courtesy visit by Professor Akande and officials from the British High Commission to the National Assembly in Abuja.
Kalu described the visit as significant, underscoring both national pride and Nigeria’s place within the international legal community.
“As Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, it is my honour to receive Professor Akande and to say clearly, as a Nigerian and as a parliamentarian, that his candidacy for the International Court of Justice for the term 2027 to 2036 is one that commands the admiration and personal support of this House,” he said.
He characterised the United Kingdom’s nomination as “not symbolic” but “structural recognition of a shared legal destiny,” arguing that Africa’s representation at the world’s highest judicial body was a matter of fairness.
“The United Kingdom has done something worthy of acknowledgement in nominating you. The FCDO committed £135 million in bilateral support to Nigeria in 2025 and 2026, according to its own Annual Report, and in November 2024 our two nations signed a Strategic Partnership built on six pillars of cooperation.
“Against that backdrop, the nomination of a Nigerian-born scholar to the world’s highest judicial bench is not symbolic. It is structural recognition of a shared legal destiny.
“Africa’s presence on the world’s highest bench is not a matter of sentiment. It is a matter of justice. And in this House, we have always believed that justice delayed is not merely a legal failure. It is a moral one”, he added.
Kalu, who holds a doctorate in law, reflected on Akande’s academic and professional journey, noting his roots in Nigeria and rise to global prominence.
“This is not merely a courtesy visit. It is the meeting of two worlds that should never be kept apart: the legislative and the adjudicative, Nigeria at home and Nigeria at its finest abroad.
“Everything you have become, from the Chichele Professor of Public International Law at All Souls College Oxford, to counsel before the International Court of Justice and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, to elected member of the UN International Law Commission, and co-author of Oppenheim’s International Law awarded the American Society of International Law’s Certificate of Merit, all of it began in Ibadan. It began with an LLB at Obafemi Awolowo University and a call to the Nigerian Bar. You carry more flags than you perhaps know, and this House receives you proudly as a son of the soil.
“The 2021 Census for England and Wales counted over 270,000 Nigerian-born residents in the United Kingdom, and according to the UK Office for National Statistics, Nigeria was the second-largest source of long-term migrants to Britain in 2024, second only to India.
“Professor Akande, your candidacy speaks to every single one of those 270,000 people. It tells them that excellence forged in Nigeria travels, and when it arrives, the world takes note”, he stated.
The Deputy Speaker also commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration for deepening Nigeria’s diplomatic engagement and expressed confidence that Akande’s candidacy would succeed.
“President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration has made institutional strengthening the cornerstone of its governance agenda. The legislature is aligned. And we understand, better than most, that no domestic reform is sustainable without an international legal order that holds.
“I commend the Tinubu-led administration and our Ministry of Foreign Affairs for championing Nigeria’s representation at the highest levels of international justice.
“Nigeria has a proud history at the ICJ, and that history must continue. I charge our government to deploy the full weight of our diplomatic relationships; our bilateral ties, our African Union standing, our ECOWAS leadership, and our voice in the UN General Assembly, in pursuit of that goal.
“When the world looks at the candidates before it, it will find in Professor Dapo Akande, a scholar formed in Nigeria and carrying the endorsement of one of the world’s most consequential democracies. Nigeria looks at that with pride. And we trust that the members of the General Assembly will look at it with the seriousness it deserves”, he asserted.
Kalu further urged the nominee to uphold the highest standards of justice if elected to the ICJ bench.
“Professor, should you take your seat on that bench, and I have every confidence that you can, you will arrive at one of the most consequential moments in the Court’s history. The ICJ’s current docket is the fullest in its history.
“Research published by Chatham House found that a fifth of all cases ever brought before the Court were filed in the last four years alone, a historic surge driven overwhelmingly by questions of genocide, armed conflict, and occupation. And yet enforcement remains uneven, and that gap falls hardest on Africa.
“West Africa is experiencing one of its most destabilising decades since independence. This is where law becomes real, because when institutions fail to enforce norms, the legitimacy of those norms begins to erode. Africa does not merely need judges. It needs judges who understand that law is not description. It is protection.
“Double standards in international justice are not theoretical criticisms. They are compliance risks. They weaken treaty regimes, undermine cooperation, and erode trust in multilateralism itself. What you bring to that bench, having argued for Nigeria, for Uganda, for the United Kingdom, for Japan, for Equatorial Guinea, and for Zambia, and having advised the African Union, the United Nations, the Council of Europe, and ASEAN, is not merely diversity of experience. It is convergence of legitimacy. No party can claim you do not understand their position. That is not a small thing. That is the whole thing,” Kalu said.
Earlier, Professor Akande said he was in Nigeria to formally seek the country’s backing for his candidacy.
He praised Nigeria’s commitment to the rule of law at both national and international levels, as well as the efforts of parliament to strengthen constitutional democracy. He assured lawmakers that, if elected, he would work to further deepen the rule of law globally.
The endorsement marks a significant diplomatic gesture, as Nigeria positions itself to rally support for one of its own on the international stage.
News
WOPU Honors Union Leader and Statesman, Joseph Akinlaja at 76
The Working People United (WOPU), a nationwide grassroots and workers’ movement, has joined countless well-wishers in celebrating Hon. (Comrade) Joseph Iranola Akinlaja on his 76th birthday, lauding him as an outstanding labour leader and a steadfast advocate of democracy.
In a statement signed by its National Coordinator-General and immediate past President of NUPENG, Comrade (Prince) Akporeha Eniredonana Akporeha, the organization expressed gratitude to God for His enduring goodness and blessings upon Akinlaja’s life, wishing him continued health and many more years of service to the nation.
Akporeha described Comrade Akinlaja, former General Secretary of NUPENG, former President of the NLC, and a former member of the Federal Parliament, as a visionary leader and exemplary role model in both Nigeria’s political and trade union spheres.
“Happy birthday to a father, mentor, leader, and builder of men, Hon. (Comrade) Joseph Iranola Akinlaja. May Almighty God continue to shower His grace and mercy upon your remarkable and impactful life as you advance in years. You are celebrated not only today but always. Congratulations, sir.”
The statement further noted: “The Working People United (WOPU) proudly celebrates your sterling achievements as a trade unionist, astute politician, chartered arbitrator, pillar of the Nigerian youths, mentor, and devoted family man. We look forward to witnessing even greater strides in progressive leadership from you in the years ahead.”
News
Obi to Kidnappers- “Please release these children for the sake of our shared humanity”
Nigeria Democratic Congress, NDC, Presidential Candidate for the upcoming presidential election in 2027, Peter Obi, has pleaded with kidnappers holding school children and their teachers for over two weeks to release them for the sake of humanity.
Writing on his X platform on Wednesday, Obi said, “I am deeply shocked and heartbroken by the condition in which these abducted school children are, as seen from their flagellated bodies. It is a painful reminder of the depth of insecurity in our land.
“I have always made it clear that the society we abuse today will take its revenge on our children tomorrow. When I first began making that statement, some of these children were not even born. This is a classic example of how the abuse of governance and society today can produce devastating consequences long after the abusers are gone.
“It is on the same line that I argue that the loans our leaders take today will hurt our children in the future, as many of them will mature for repayment and consequences long after we are gone.
“To those holding these children, I make a direct appeal to your conscience. Remember that these are innocent children – sons and daughters of people who have placed their hopes, dreams, and entire future in them. In every one of them, you will find reflections of your own children, your own family, and your own humanity.
“No grievance, no hardship, no justification can ever outweigh the sanctity of a child’s life and innocence. Whatever path has led to this moment, there is still room for remorse, for humanity, and for a change of heart. I therefore appeal to your sense of mercy: release these children immediately. “Let them go. Return them safely to society to reunite with their families”
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