DSS detained me for six months, taunted me to transform to cat like Igboho –Ekiti traditionalist, Ifasooto - Newstrends
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DSS detained me for six months, taunted me to transform to cat like Igboho –Ekiti traditionalist, Ifasooto

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Ekiti-based traditionalist, Dada Ifasooto

An Ekiti-based traditionalist, Dada Ifasooto, spent six months in the custody of the Department of State Services in Abuja. He tells KAYODE OYERO how the secret police pronounced him innocent and released him on December 24, 2021 after wrongfully accusing him of preparing charms for the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra; and embattled Yoruba Nation agitator, Sunday Adeyemo, aka Sunday Igboho

Please tell us about yourself.

My name is Dada Ifasooto. I am 29 years old. I am a herbal medical practitioner and a traditionalist based in Ekiti. I inherited divination from my forefathers. I am also a youth volunteer and I do join vigilantes and Amotekun operatives to chase kidnappers from Ikere Ekiti.

Who is Sunday Igboho to you?

I have not met him before but I have heard a lot about him in news reports of the Yoruba Nation rallies he attended in some South-West states before he was arrested. I have not met him personally.

How were you arrested?

There is a young man called Tajudeen (Irinloye) whom I have known for some time. He is a commercial motorcycle rider in Ibadan and he had come to me for treatment for an ailment. I called him thereafter to follow up on the treatment plan that I gave to him but unknown to me, he is an aide of Chief Igboho and the DSS had arrested him and some other aides during the widely-reported night raid of July 1, 2021.

When I phoned him, his line rang out and he didn’t call back, which was strange to me. I never knew he was in the DSS custody. The next thing I saw was that on July 16, 2021, four fully-armed men in mufti stormed my sitting room in Ikere Ekiti around 6pm. They scattered everywhere, asking me where my android phone was. After I gave them my phone, they told me I called a commercial motorcycle rider in Ibadan. They said he (Tajudeen) had been detained and they had come to arrest me. They searched my apartment asking if I had a gun but I told them I do not own one. I asked them to show me their search and arrest warrants but they could not provide any.

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Apart from your phone, what else was taken from your apartment?

They frisked the whole house and left the whole place in a mess but they didn’t find anything incriminating. They took some of my divination tools. One of the four men said they should start leaving but another fellow shut him up and insisted that they must arrest me. I told them I had not committed any offence to warrant being arrested. They were speaking Yoruba language till that point but the four of them switched to Hausa language immediately and discussed for minutes. I didn’t understand what they discussed afterwards because the language they spoke was Hausa.

What happened after the discussion?

One of them ordered me to stand up and follow them to Ikere Police State, claiming that they were from the station. I told them that if truly they were from Ikere Police Station, the police officers there would have informed them that I am passionate about community policing in Ikere as I do join vigilantes and Amotekun operatives to chase out kidnappers and criminals. I insisted that I was not going to follow them but they said I only needed to come to the station to sign a document that nothing incriminating was found in my house after the search.

Did you follow them?

I did but to my surprise, they didn’t take me to the police station but went straight to the DSS office in Ibadan. In Ibadan, I resisted them, saying I would not go in until they tell me my offence because I am an easygoing person. In fact, I have not attended any protest or rally before but they took off my clothes, left me with only boxers and pushed me into a cell.

How many DSS operatives came for the operation?

They were more than eight but only four of them entered my sitting room. They came with two Hilux vehicles and a motorcycle.

Did they shoot during your arrest?

They cocked their guns but they didn’t release any bullet.

Were there other persons in your house during the arrest and were they also taken away?

My wife was preparing dinner in the kitchen when they came that evening but she fled. I was the only one the DSS took away to their Ibadan office and I was the only detainee they drove to their Abuja office.

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When were you moved from Ibadan to Abuja?

On July 18, 2021, which was a Sunday. Very early that morning, the DSS operatives told me to freshen up and I did. They gave me back my clothes and handcuffed me. They told me I would be taken to Abuja and I told them again that I had not committed any offence by phoning someone who is my customer. They told me to cooperate, saying they were the ones that arrested my boss. I asked them which boss? They didn’t respond till we got to Abuja that same day.

Who did they say your boss was?

A DSS official interrogated me when I arrived in Abuja. He asked whether any herbalist followed those who came for my arrest and I told him I don’t know. The official then informed me that the same people who arrested my boss, Chief Sunday Igboho, who turned to cats, were the ones who also came for me. I told him Chief Sunday Igboho was not my boss and I had never met him before. He mockingly told me to disappear then that I had been handcuffed and I told him I don’t know what he was talking about. I told him I can’t vanish because I am not a criminal. He shut me up and locked me up. I was locked up for the first three months and nearly forgotten there. I was pained because I did not commit any offence and did not deserve the treatment.

I developed ulcer and high blood pressure in DSS custody after three months. On October 10, 2021, I was taken to a hospital and I wasn’t taken back there. On November 10, 2021, I was taken out of the cell to write down a statement and was immediately returned to the cell.

Were you detained alone in a cell or with others?

I was locked up with some Hausa/Fulani detainees accused of being Boko Haram members. We were 13 in the room.

What was feeding like in detention?

I was fed with a small loaf of bread and a tiny sachet of Cowbell as breakfast. They brought some colourless rice for lunch and so on.

Were you beaten in detention?

No, I was not beaten but the conditions I was subjected to were dehumanising. I couldn’t sleep in detention, and I developed so many ailments.

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While you were in detention, did you see any of the 12 Igboho’s aides who were arrested during the raid of his house in Ibadan?

Yes, I met Tajudeen, the same person I telephoned that made the DSS to track my phone number. I met him in DSS custody even though we were not held in the same cell. He was shocked after I told him the whole story. He asked whether my people knew my whereabouts and I said none of my family members knew whether I was alive or dead because the security operatives told me that I was being taken to Ikere Police Station only for them to take me to the DSS office.

All through your six-month detention, what offence did the DSS say you committed?

The DSS said I phoned Tajudeen and I explained to them that he is my customer. They asked for the meaning of my name and I told them that it was given to me by my grandfather who was also a diviner. They asked whether I am also a diviner and if I learnt it somewhere. I told them I am a diviner but inherited it from my grandfather. I told them I had no interest in it but the elders said the oracle chose me upon the demise of my grandfather, so I had no other choice than to walk the path.

After many months in detention, some DSS operatives asked that I be brought out for another interrogation. They asked me of the offence brought against me and I told them that I was accused of phoning Tajudeen. The operatives then ordered that Tajudeen’s file be brought out. They checked his file and all they found there was that Tajudeen said he gave me money as a trado-medical practitioner and I wanted to check up on him.

What was the response of the DSS operatives?

They accused me of preparing charms for Chief Sunday Igboho, which is not true. I did not prepare any charm for him. I have not met him before. They also asked me whether I had been to Imo State and I said I had not been to Imo or anywhere in the South-East. The officers then accused me of making charms for IPOB (Indigenous People of Biafra) but I told them that was not true as I had never been in contact with them.

How were you released?

I was eventually released on December 24, 2021 and the DSS operatives told me to be grateful to the lawyer and to their own investigation which showed that I am an innocent man. I was warned to be mindful of my activities going forward so as not to return to their custody. It is painful to be unjustly detained for six months but I thank God that I didn’t spend this year’s Christmas in DSS custody. The DSS should carry out proper investigation before arresting people.

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VIDEO: Thousands march across South Africa as anti-immigration groups push June 30 deadline

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Thousands march across South Africa as anti-immigration groups push June 30 deadline

VIDEO: Thousands march across South Africa as anti-immigration groups push June 30 deadline

Thousands of people marched in several South African cities on Tuesday as anti-immigration groups sought to enforce a self-imposed June 30 deadline for undocumented foreign nationals to leave the country, prompting heightened security and renewed debate over immigration, border control and public safety.

Videos shared on social media, including footage published by AfricaFactsZone, showed large crowds of demonstrators marching through major streets carrying South African flags and placards while calling for stricter enforcement of the country’s immigration laws.

The demonstrations, organised by anti-immigration movements including Operation Dudula and March and March, are among the largest migration-related protests witnessed in South Africa since the widespread xenophobic violence that erupted in 2008.

Protest organisers argue that undocumented migration has contributed to unemployment, crime and increased pressure on public services. However, researchers and human rights organisations have repeatedly cautioned that there is no conclusive evidence linking immigrants as a group to rising crime or unemployment, urging policymakers and the public to rely on verified data rather than generalisations.

A heavy police presence was deployed across key protest locations, including Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban and Cape Town, with public order officers, armoured vehicles and helicopters monitoring the demonstrations to prevent violence and protect lives and property.

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Acting Minister of Police Firoz Cachalia said law enforcement agencies were fully prepared to maintain order, warning that anyone involved in violence, intimidation or criminal activities during the protests would face prosecution.

Authorities also disclosed that scores of people have been arrested in recent months over incidents linked to anti-immigration demonstrations and acts of vigilantism.

Leaders of the protest groups said they planned to submit petitions to government officials demanding stronger border controls, faster deportation of undocumented migrants and stricter enforcement of existing immigration laws.

The protests followed weeks of tension that reportedly prompted thousands of foreign nationals from countries including Zimbabwe, Malawi, Mozambique and Nigeria to either leave South Africa voluntarily or seek assistance from their diplomatic missions amid fears of violence.

Several foreign-owned businesses also reportedly closed temporarily in some communities as a precaution ahead of the demonstrations.

The latest wave of protests comes after a series of anti-immigration demonstrations in recent months, during which several people were killed in isolated incidents in KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape, further raising concerns about the potential for xenophobic violence.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has acknowledged public concerns over undocumented migration but reiterated that immigration enforcement remains the responsibility of the state.

He condemned violence, intimidation and vigilantism, urging South Africans to allow law enforcement agencies to carry out their constitutional duties without interference.

South African authorities have also clarified that the June 30 deadline was not issued by the government but by citizen-led anti-immigration groups.

Officials previously dismissed widely circulated social media messages claiming that the government had ordered all undocumented migrants to leave the country by June 30, describing the claims as false and misleading.

Earlier this month, the South African government announced additional measures to strengthen immigration management, including stricter enforcement of the Immigration Act, enhanced border security, improved digital immigration systems and closer cooperation with neighbouring African countries to address irregular migration.

The demonstrations have once again placed South Africa’s immigration policy at the centre of national debate, with analysts calling for balanced solutions that protect national security, uphold the rule of law and respect the rights and dignity of all people regardless of their nationality or immigration status.

VIDEO: Thousands march across South Africa as anti-immigration groups push June 30 deadline

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Katsina Police Arrest Housewife for Allegedly Slitting Husband’s Throat, Foil Bandit Attack in Dandume

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Katsina Police Arrest Housewife for Allegedly Slitting Husband's Throat, Foil Bandit Attack in Dandume

Katsina Police Arrest Housewife for Allegedly Slitting Husband’s Throat, Foil Bandit Attack in Dandume

  • A 23-year-old housewife is in police custody for allegedly attempting to kill her husband while he slept, as security operatives also repelled a bandit attack in Dandume, recovering motorcycles and a machete.

The Katsina State Police Command has arrested a 23-year-old housewife, Sadiya Lawal, for allegedly attempting to murder her husband by slitting his throat while he was asleep in their home in Katsina metropolis. The incident has prompted a police investigation as the victim recovers from a deep neck wound in hospital. The state Police Public Relations Officer, DSP Abubakar Sadiq, disclosed the arrest in a statement on Monday, confirming that the command is investigating a case of attempted culpable homicide. According to the police, the victim, identified as Jamilu Ibrahim, reported the incident at the Central Market Police Division at about 9:00 a.m. on Monday, alleging that his wife attacked him with a knife around 5:30 a.m. while he was asleep.

Police investigations revealed that Ibrahim sustained a deep cut to the neck and was immediately rushed to a nearby hospital, where he is currently responding positively to treatment. Officers visited the scene shortly after the report, arrested the suspect, and recovered the sharp knife believed to have been used in the attack as an exhibit. In a statement, the police spokesperson detailed the incident: “Today, June 29, 2026, at about 9:00 AM, one Jamilu Ibrahim, male, reported at the Central Market Division, Katsina, that on the same date at about 5:30 am, while he was asleep, his wife, one Sadiya Lawal, female, age 23, attacked him with a knife in an attempt to slit his throat. The victim sustained a deep cut injury to the neck.” The suspect remains in custody under investigation and will be charged to court upon completion of the investigation.

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Reacting to the domestic violence case, the state Commissioner of Police, Aliyu Umar Fage, cautioned residents against domestic violence and urged families to resolve disputes through peaceful and lawful means. The command reaffirmed its commitment to tackling violent crime within households and protecting all residents across the state.

In a separate operation, the Katsina State Police Command successfully foiled a bandit attack in Dandume Local Government Area, recovering two motorcycles and a machete after a gun battle with fleeing suspects. The attempted bandit attack occurred on June 28, 2026, when a distress call was received at the Dandume Police Division reporting that a large group of armed bandits riding motorcycles had been sighted along the Kadisau-Sheme Road in Dandume LGA. The Divisional Police Officer immediately mobilised operatives from the Violent Crimes Response Unit (VCRU) in collaboration with members of the Katsina State Community Watch Corps (KSCWC) to the area. The security team engaged the suspected bandits in a fierce gun duel. Due to superior firepower and tactics, the suspects were forced to retreat and flee the scene, abandoning two operational motorcycles and a machete, which were recovered as exhibits.

The Commissioner of Police commended the officers involved in repelling the bandits and reaffirmed the command’s commitment to protecting lives and property across the state. He also urged members of the public to continue providing timely and credible information to aid the police in combating crime and criminality. “This command remains committed to ensuring the safety and security of all residents. We also urge members of the public to continue providing timely and credible information that will aid the police in combating crime and criminality,” CP Fage stated.

In May, the command successfully foiled separate kidnapping and cattle-rustling operations in Kankara and Malumfashi Local Government Areas of the state. The command also rescued 11 abducted passengers and recovered 25 stolen cows, demonstrating sustained efforts against all forms of crime and criminality in Katsina State.

Katsina Police Arrest Housewife for Allegedly Slitting Husband’s Throat, Foil Bandit Attack in Dandume

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Troops Overpower Fleeing Terrorists, Rescue 10 Abducted NECO Candidates in Borno

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Troops Overpower Fleeing Terrorists, Rescue 10 Abducted NECO Candidates in Borno

Troops Overpower Fleeing Terrorists, Rescue 10 Abducted NECO Candidates in Borno

  • In a daring operation, Nigerian troops rescued 10 NECO candidates and teachers after ISWAP terrorists attacked a school in Borno, while a vice principal recounted how military airstrikes forced the insurgents to flee.

The Nigerian military has successfully rescued 10 students and teachers abducted by suspected ISWAP terrorists during an attack on Government Day Secondary School, Lassa, in Askira/Uba Local Government Area of Borno State. The rescue operation, which involved a synchronised air and ground assault, forced the fleeing terrorists to abandon their captives after a fierce gun battle. The attack occurred around 9 a.m. on Monday while students were preparing to sit for their NECO Biology examination. The terrorists, who reportedly wore military and forest guard attire, passed through the community’s weekly market on motorcycles before storming the school and shooting sporadically. Tragically, one teacher was killed during the assault, while another sustained gunshot injuries.

Immediately upon receiving reports of the attack, the Theatre Command of Operation HADIN KAI launched a coordinated search-and-rescue mission. The military deployed both strike aircraft and Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) platforms to support ground troops mobilised to the area. According to Captain Muhammad Goni, Acting Military Information Officer of the Joint Task Force North East, the troops, guided by real-time intelligence from air platforms overhead, made contact with the fleeing terrorists around the Daggu area. This led to a fierce exchange of fire, during which troops outmanoeuvred the insurgents, inflicting casualties and recovering seven motorcycles used by the assailants to escape—significantly disrupting their retreat.

Paul Namaske, Vice Principal of the school, who was among those abducted, provided a harrowing firsthand account of the attack and subsequent rescue. In a video recording, Namaske stated that the attackers took two teachers and more than 20 students into the bush after overpowering the school. “Today, being June 29, the terrorists took us into the bush. When a military aircraft started hovering over us, the insurgents began to disperse. While this was happening, we heard gunshots from the soldiers, so they (the terrorists) began to run while we started escaping. In the process, the soldiers rescued us,” Namaske recounted. He estimated that approximately 20 students and two teachers were initially taken, though the exact number of abducted persons remains unclear.

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Regrettably, the operation came at a cost. The military confirmed that one soldier and a member of the Civilian Joint Task Force made the supreme sacrifice during the intense firefight with the terrorists. The rescued victims, who were found unharmed, are currently receiving medical attention and psychosocial support. Borno State Commissioner for Information and Internal Security, Usman Tar, confirmed that assessments are ongoing to determine the exact number of abducted individuals. “For now, seven of them have been rescued. We cannot confirm their gender yet. Assessment is still ongoing. We have sent a delegation to the community to assess the situation and build confidence in the minds of the residents,” Tar stated.

The Borno State Police Command emphasised that the rapid response of security troops prevented a larger-scale kidnapping operation. Police spokesperson ASP Nahum Daso confirmed that security forces, including the military, CJTF, and the area commander in Askira/Uba, are currently combing the surrounding forests to rescue remaining abductees and apprehend the attackers. “Security forces confronted them. The Commissioner of Police deployed the Area Commander in Askira Uba; they are currently combing the bush,” Daso said.

Samaila Kaigama, President of the Borno South Youth Alliance, confirmed the occurrence and revealed that the terrorists used military and forest guard uniforms during the operation. He also noted that one instructor was killed and another was shot during the attack. “They killed one teacher from Chibok. They shot another, but not dead yet. They also kidnapped some students and women selling on the school premises. The numbers are not yet out,” Kaigama stated.

The Borno State Government has dispatched a delegation to the town to investigate the situation and reassure residents. Commissioner Tar confirmed that the government is working closely with security agencies to ensure the safe return of all abducted persons and to prevent future attacks.

The attack marks the latest in a series of assaults on schools in the North-East region, an area frequently targeted by insurgent groups despite ongoing military operations. In May, terrorists abducted 42 pupils from Mussa Primary and Junior Secondary School in the same local government area.

Amnesty International has condemned the attack, describing it as a grave assault on children’s right to education. The rights group warned that the abducted students face serious risks and noted that widespread fear of attacks has forced many schools across northern Nigeria to remain empty for years. “Schools should and must be places of safety, and no child should have to choose between their education and their life,” the organisation stated.

Security forces have intensified operations across the affected area while reinforcing security around vulnerable communities and schools to prevent similar attacks. Captain Goni assured residents that the military remains committed to protecting civilians and combating insurgency in the North-East. “The attack underscores the desperation of terrorist groups who, faced with sustained pressure from ongoing military operations, have resorted to attacking soft targets,” the military statement read.

Authorities have urged members of the public to remain watchful and submit credible intelligence to security services while dismissing unverified rumours. The Borno State Government has assured residents that efforts are ongoing to track down the perpetrators and ensure the safety of all citizens.

The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has commended the gallantry and swift response of troops of Operation HADIN KAI. In a statement, NANS described the rescue as “a remarkable operation demonstrating the dedication, bravery, and professionalism of our security forces in safeguarding the lives and aspirations of Nigerian students.”

Troops Overpower Fleeing Terrorists, Rescue 10 Abducted NECO Candidates in Borno

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