Residents of Ilaje community, a Lagos suburb beside Ajah on the Lekki-Epe Expressway have enjoyed peace for many years.
But all that changed recently when a
communal conflict, which started in 2011 between them and landowners in
the area, upturned their quiet life.
Ilaje, which was so named because the
residents are made up largely of indigenes of the Ilaje tribe – a
riverside area in Ondo State – has seen a lot of violence since the
conflict began.
In July 2012, some gun-wielding
hoodlums, whom the residents suspected were sponsored by those who
coveted their lands, invaded the town.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that the
police were called in and the hoodlums dispersed. But by the time the
dust settled, 55-year-old Augustus Oronla was lying on the street, shot
dead.
According to residents, the hoodlums
destroyed property and shot sporadically when they got to the community.
Many counted themselves lucky at the time.
Since that attack took place, at least
three other shooting incidents have taken place in Ilaje, which set the
community permanently on edge.
In November 2012, four months after Oronla was shot dead. Another attack took place in Ilaje.
This time, many of the residents lost
their property as the invading hoodlums did not just shoot sporadically;
they set many houses on fire.
When our correspondent visited Ilaje on
Tuesday, a whole section of the community seemed to have become a ghost
town as those who lost their houses to the arsonists simply abandoned
them.
Seyi Olatuga, whose mother’s house was
burnt down in the attack, lamented how life had changed tremendously for
her mother since the incident.
“My mother went for an event and did not
sleep at home that day. She was coming back the following morning when
she learnt that there was mayhem in Ilaje.
“She had to run elsewhere for safety.
But by the time she got home, many houses had been burnt down, including
her own. I was not at home at the time and I thank God she was not at
home as well. Things have really been hard for her since the house was
burnt down. It has really affected her life,” Olatuga said.
During the attack, the hoodlums fled after the police intervention, but not until they had killed a young man, Martin Edgar.
The deceased was said to have been shot while helping a neighbour to quench the fire set to his house.
There was another attack in 2012 during which six members of the community were said to have been shot.
A community leader told our
correspondent that one of the six victims is still in the Lagos
University Teaching Hospital, battling with the complications that arose
from the gunshot injury he sustained.
Six months after that mayhem, which
claimed the life of Edgar, and when the hoodlums thought the residents
of Ilaje were becoming too comfortable again, they struck.
On May 25, 2013, three youths from Ilaje were shot dead in an attack on a football field in the area.
Eight others were injured in the attack, one of them critically.
The young man that was critically injured is 28-year-old Oke Oronla, whose father was shot dead in July 2012.
Unfortunately, when our correspondent
visited the community on Tuesday, the residents said the younger Oronla
died the day before because the gunshot injury he sustained could not be
managed.
The home of the Oronlas was deserted when our correspondent visited the community. The house was locked.
A neighbour of the Oronlas, Sojue
Awolowo, told our correspondent that all the residents of the house had
packed out after the incessant attacks claimed father and son.
Our correspondent observed that belongings were also being moved out of Awolowo’s house and loaded in a waiting vehicle.
When our correspondent asked if he was
moving out, Awolowo said, “I’m not going anywhere but my wife has to
leave this community right now. She is not safe here. My children have
already moved out. I will stay but I need my family to be away from
these incessant killings.
“My neighbour lost his life to the
attacks by these hoodlums and now his son has been killed. His poor
widow had not got over the killing of her husband when she lost her son
too. It is a very terrible thing.”
Many men in the community seemed to have adopted the method of staying behind while sending their families out.
Like Awolowo, Sunday Adesuyi said he had also relocated his family.
He said, “If there is any problem and I
need to run, at least it will be only me. You really need to understand
why people are leaving. It is because anytime there is an attack, the
same people will be seen a few days later around Ajah, walking freely.
That makes people afraid.
“It is not that people around here love
to abandon their homes, it is because when arrests are made, a few days
later, those responsible for the violence are set free. We are citizens
of this country; we are entitled to government protection.”
When our correspondent moved around the
community, it became clear that a lot of people had moved out or were in
the process of fleeing.
In the midst of all this, a woman and her unclad six children sat in front of their house, looking dejected.
Our correspondent asked if she intended to move out for the safety of her children.
The woman, Elizabeth Emeka, said, “I
really want to leave because I am afraid. Everybody is packing out but I
cannot. Where will I pack to?
“Of course I fear for the lives of my
children in the midst of all this violence, but I cannot just pack and
go. Where will I go?”
There are a lot of Ghanaians in Ilaje as well, most of whom are engaged in petty trading.
Some of them told Saturday PUNCH that they would leave as well.
“I cannot stay here with the hope of
making a living and losing my life in the process,” one of the Ghanaians
told our correspondent.
Another Ghanaian, Emmanuel Ocran, said,
“I have been living here for two years now. But it has reached a point
that I can no longer stay here.
“I’m leaving to go and stay temporarily
with a friend. Things have become too violent for my liking here. My
house rent is not even due yet, but since others are leaving, I have to
leave as well.
“I actually thought I could withstand
the crisis but this latest one has given me a rethink. I need to get out
of this vicinity.”
Our correspondent learnt that much of
those who populate Ilaje were residents of Maroko area of Lagos, who
were displaced after the military government of Brig-Gen. Raji Rasaki
(retd.) demolished their homes in 1990.
They are mostly fishermen. The women engage in petty trading.
But the sense of community, which the residents said drew their kinsmen to the area, has been compromised by violence.
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