• Farmers flee as gunmen cart away money, foodstuffs
About 18 persons suspected to be Fulani herdsmen have invaded farms 
in Lagun Village, Lagelu Local Council of Oyo State and shot a chief 
security guard, Jimmy Aido. They also robbed the residents of the farms,
 carting away an undisclosed amount of money in the process.
While Aido is currently recuperating at the Iwo Medical Centre in 
Iwo, Osun State where he was hospitalised, the workers have all deserted
 the farms for fears of a repeat visit by the attackers.
The gunmen were said to have first invaded ARDIS Farms, a large 
section of the area that belongs to the former Secretary to the Oyo 
State Government, Ayodel Adigun, ransacked it before moving to other 
settlements in the neighbouring villages of Adedokun and Alapata, both 
in the Lagelu local government area.
An eyewitness account had it that the invaders, armed with 
sophisticated weapons had earlier robbed unsuspecting motorists along 
the Iwo-Ibadan Road for some hours, before attacking the farms along the
 axis. They raided each farm and carted away heavy sums of money and 
food stuffs.
ARDIS Farms, which is situated on about 500 acres of land, began the 
production of palm kernel and livestock production in 1995. The large 
expanse has about 35 workers, both residents and non-residents.
The robbery operation was said to have lasted for about seven hours, 
as the marauders held the terrified farms workers to ransom between 8:00
 p.m., Tuesday till the wee hours of 3:00 a.m. of Wednesday.
Narrating his ordeal to reporters at the farm yesterday, one of the 
workers on duty, Mr. Olanipekun Ogunkolade said the invaders ransacked 
all the rooms on the farm and carted away an undisclosed sum of money.
He said: “They said where is the money? Where is the money? I brought
 what I had on me, but they shouted, where is the remaining money? I 
told them that that was what I had. They now called another worker, whom
 we all call Baba Ondo. They forced him to take them to his room. They 
said ‘Oya, let us go to your room.’ They ransacked the place and moved 
to our rooms and they ransacked the whole place.
“They also went into the manager’s room and asked us about who held 
the key to the place and we told them he had left for Lagun village. 
They asked us all sorts of things like cigarettes, Indian hemp, but we 
told them repeatedly that we didn’t have all those things.
“When we told them we didn’t have the key, they became very angry and
 took their machetes and cut the mosquito net. They entered the room and
 they warned us not to come out and threatened that they would gun us 
down.
“One of the security men went to call the chief security officer, who
 unknowingly walked into an ambush laid for him. They shot him and left 
him there for dead and those of us on the farm did not know that they 
had shot him.
“We later organised a search party for him, with all of us shouting 
Jimmy! Jimmy!, until we heard him shouting in a certain part of the farm
 and we met him writhing in pain.
“He was shouting, ‘please help me o, help me.’ We now went to the 
area and found him lying down and was in great pain. However, the 
robbers fired some shots in our direction and everybody ran.
“It was around 3:00 a.m., after the invaders had gone that we came 
back and took Jimmy to the hospital. We first took him to Iyana Offa, 
but he was rejected, because of the bullet wounds. As we were going the 
Fulanis had already mounted a road block at Lagun. They intercepted us 
and they even took away my clothes.’’
On the invaders’ identity, Ogunkolade said, “Yes, I think they are 
Fulanis, they first put on masks, but later they removed the masks, they
 even asked me whether I knew them and I said I didn’t know them.
I know that they came in a large number. They were about 18, five 
entered the rooms with us. Eventually when they left us, they just went 
to the rooms and ransacked everywhere. They finished our eba, they were 
even asking for more fish and I said we didn’t have fish anymore.”
The Farm Manager, Mr. Emmanuel Ashava described the incident as one 
that took them by surprise, explaining that no such case had ever 
occurred, since the farm started operation in 1995.
He said the invaders must have known that the farm is the biggest and
 the most prosperous in the area and that this made them concentrate on 
it.
The owner of the farm, Mr. Ayodele Adigun told journalists that 
though he could not immediately ascertain the worth of the losses, they 
would be in the region of millions of naira.
Adigun took journalists on a fact-finding tour of the farm to 
ascertain the level of damage. Journalists saw the stains of blood, 
alleged to belong to the shot security guard, Aido.
When The Guardian visited Aido at the hospital in Iwo, Osun State, he
 was seen lying on a bed, but could not field questions from 
journalists, as he was in acute shock and was unable to speak.
Confirming his status to journalists, an official of the hospital, 
Mrs. Adebabu Adeola said Aido had since he was brought to the hospital 
been recovering.
The invaders were alleged to have engaged two teams of policemen in 
two separate shootouts, during their night-long operation. However, all 
efforts to get the reaction of the state police on the incident were 
abortive as the State Police Public Relations Officer, Adekunle Ajibutu,
 could not be reached on the phone. All calls directed at his line were 
unanswered as at press time.
Source: Guardian 
 

 
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