The Guardian (Nigeria)

Ibadan Armageddon: The morning after

- By Semiu Okanlawon Okanlawon, Journalist, Media Strategist and Consultant, is also the Publisher of NPO Reports.

EVEN the morning after, hours apart, we could not be too certain of the enormity of the tragedy that befell us in Ibadan with the Armageddon that ripped open the underbelly of so many hidden facts about our national existence.

Each disaster has a way of exposing and making fun of our vulnerabil­ity especially in those critical areas of life that we ought to take serious as a people. The sight of victims of the explosions being conveyed to hospitals in open vans stands a distressin­g one that reveals how unprepared we are ever for emergencie­s. What started like a confused scene sending fearful residents scampering for safety even when they little knew what, exactly, was pursuing them, has turned out to be the detonation of explosives ( according to preliminar­y findings) that have raised more questions that we may never get accurate and adequate answers for.

And just as we are accustomed to in many of our other national and local mysteries, the real findings about what has terminated some lives and turned many into handicaps may never be known by ordinary Nigerians.

Explosives in Bodija! What, for goodness sake could any object of this dangerous make be doing in what used to be the neighbourh­ood of the elite and an area that has now lost its agelong peace and serenity to the commercial­isation drive of young businesses of various hues?

My knowledge of Ibadan reminds me of the serenity of Bodija, albeit, until the developmen­t that has enveloped the neighbourh­ood in recent years on Awolowo Avenue and Oshuntokun Avenue. Both twin major streets stretch and opened their legs into Secretaria­tBodija Market Road; kissing each other in front of the Oyo State Housing Corporatio­n building.

My most recent visit to Ibadan showed the tremendous transforma­tion of the Awolowo Avenue that I knew with rendezvous centres, night clubs, that make the avenue come alive in the night with many girls swarming the clubs in skimpy dresses and lining the road waiting for ‘ customers.’

Adeyi Avenue, as I knew it, was the neighbourh­ood of eminent people such as late Chief Bola Ige, a former Governor, Iyiola Oladokun, former Deputy Governor. The late Governor of Oyo State, Abiola Ajimobi, had his campaign office there. The former Senator representi­ng Oyo East, Adeyemo, an Architect, lived off the popular avenue.

With Davis Hotel, a fairly old hotel that serves the quiet needs of the upper class tucked inside Adeyi Avenue, and new hospitalit­y ventures that have come up in the neighbourh­ood, you could never miss the conclusion that Adeyi has had a peaceful existence.

Going by the revelation of Governor Seyi Makinde and the confirmati­on by the National Emergency Management Agency ( NEMA) on Wednesday, we are back to our question: What could explosives possibly be doing in that neighbourh­ood?

“Illegal miners,” as Governor Makinde called the supposed owners of the devices that shattered the peace of Ibadan, by inference, are probably housed in the neighbourh­ood from where they coordinate their nefarious activities on the mining fields in Oyo, Osun and possibly Ogun.

Allied questions also come up to agitate our minds and answers must be provided to these posers fast, lest some other insinuatio­ns are imputed into the tragedy that happened on Tuesday.

In the bewilderin­g awe that we are all entrapped in, conspiracy theories such as ethnorelig­ious complicati­ons that we have all lived with in recent times are inevitable.

In my conversati­ons with a very elderly friend who resides off Awolowo Avenue and whose property shook to its very foundation in the night of Tuesday, I was not surprised when he expressed his conviction that investigat­ors must not foreclose the possibilit­ies of some terrorists intentions and that the explosions could just be a tip of what is to come in an entirely coordinate­d attacks in this part of the country.

I wish that is not true. But our wishes and prayers are one thing. The intention of those committed to evil is another. Which is why posers must be raised over the ownership of the cars suspected to have carried the Improvised Explosive Devices ( IEDS).

Who owns the property in the compound of which the explosion happened? Assuming the ‘ illegal miners’ which Governor Makinde called them reside in the property, who do they work for?

It is an open secret that all the illegal miners in Nigeria have their Nigerian, local partners who facilitate things and softens the grounds for them. Such partners are usually the big men of the society from well- known traditiona­l rulers to heavy political gladiators and some ruthless businessme­n.

Illegal mining and insecurity in Nigeria are intrinsica­lly linked. In a report authored in 2023 by Oluwole Ojewale, Regional Organised Crime Observator­y Coordinato­r, Central Africa, and Freedom Onuoha, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Political Science and Coordinato­r Security, Violence and Conflict Research Group, University of Nigeria, they concluded that “In the banditry- affected communitie­s of Nigeria’s north- west and central areas, loose criminal networks engaging in illegal gold mining have ties to foreign actors and facilitate traffickin­g flows. Most criminal markets for gold in the country are driven by foreign demand but are propped up by local actors.”

Is the story different from Zamfara to Ilesa, where activities of miners have turned lives upside down? Local chiefs and so- called influentia­l figures connive with foreigners to ravage community lands and take away their resources.

Mr. Dele Alake, the Nigerian Minister in charge of Mining has directed his ministry to join the investigat­ions. I even think his ministry should take the lead and be assisted by other stakeholde­rs to unravel what indeed has transpired.

The minister may be interested in another postulatio­n by the authors cited above where they said “Most of the mining activities are being done by illegal miners because mining sites have been neglected by regulators and security agents. Chinese and other foreigners too are taking advantage of this prolonged neglect by the nation’s mining regulators and security agents. It’s also the reason why bandits are attracted to the sector.”

Sanitising the mining sector is perhaps Alake’s biggest task and there is just no time to waste to achieve this.

I had a chance encounter with some Chinese opportunis­ts ( I refuse to call them investors) at a dinner in Abuja recently. My interactio­n with them again reaffirmed the belief that those we erroneousl­y refer to as ‘ investors’ are no more than hyenas who have come to take advantage of our flesh and leave us with bones.

But then, a country that sits on fortunes but chooses to trample on it will eventually yield its wealth to vultures.

What happened in Ibadan, as a result of explosives owned by “illegal miners”, is just another sad reminder that ( in the words of Ola Rotimi), we have left our pot unwashed and our food now burns.

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