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Several Iru Ekun operatives linked to activist Sunday Adeyemo, popularly known as Sunday Igboho, were injured in a gun battle with suspected cross-border bandits during an operation inside an Oyo State forest. The clash has renewed debate over self-help security in the South-West.

The Gist
- Igboho-linked Iru Ekun operatives injured in clash
- Gun battle with suspected cross-border bandits
- Operation took place inside an Oyo forest
Reports say the team came under fire while moving through the Old Oyo National Park area to track armed criminals believed to be hiding in the reserve.
How the Iru Ekun operatives were ambushed
According to accounts of the operation, the men deployed surveillance drones to map suspected hideouts before advancing on foot.
The mission reportedly turned violent when heavily armed men opened fire. Several members of the team were wounded in the exchange.
The exact number of those injured has not been officially confirmed. No independent casualty figures for the attackers had emerged at the time of reporting.
Iru Ekun is a private security outfit associated with Igboho, set up to confront kidnappers and bandits operating across parts of Yorubaland.
Who is behind the outfit
Igboho rose to national attention years ago for campaigning against killings and kidnappings blamed on armed herders in the South-West. He later became a prominent voice in the Yoruba Nation self-determination movement.
His latest security venture has drawn both support and scrutiny. Backers see it as a response to gaps in state protection.
Critics, however, question the legality and oversight of armed non-state groups operating in the bush without clear lines of accountability.
Rising insecurity in Oyo
The forest belts of Oyo and neighbouring states have become flashpoints for kidnapping and cross-border banditry. Farmers and travellers have repeatedly reported attacks along rural routes.
Security agencies have launched operations in the same forests, but the vast, poorly policed terrain remains difficult to secure.
Communities say criminals slip across boundaries to evade arrest, then regroup deep inside reserves that few patrols can reach.
Why it matters
The incident highlights the risks faced by community and private outfits that step into spaces the formal security architecture struggles to cover.
It also raises questions about coordination. Without clear links to the police and military, such groups can face heavy resistance and casualties when they confront well-armed gangs.
Some analysts warn that poorly regulated outfits could blur the line between protection and vigilantism, even when their intentions are genuine.
What happens next
Authorities are yet to give a full official account of the clash, and the claims around the operation remain to be independently verified.
For residents of affected communities, the bigger worry is simple: the forests around them remain dangerous.
Whether through state forces, regional outfits or a mix of both, the search for lasting security in Oyo is far from over.
The wider picture
Across Nigeria’s South-West, frustration with insecurity has pushed many communities to lean on local guards, hunters and vigilante groups.
These outfits often know the terrain better than outsiders, but they rarely match the firepower and training that modern bandits carry.
Security analysts argue that the durable fix lies in better-funded, better-coordinated state forces, not a patchwork of armed groups acting on their own.
Until that gap closes, residents say they are left to rely on whoever shows up to defend them, and the latest clash may not be the last.
Source: Iru Ekun

