Terror has returned to Ora, a border community on the Osun-Kwara boundary, after gunmen abducted Ifedayo LGA Vice Chairman Mr. Debo Farounbi on Tuesday night, the third kidnapping to hit the troubled town in less than seven months.
A gang of heavily armed gunmen stormed the town under the cover of darkness at approximately 10 p.m., firing indiscriminately into the air, sending terrified residents scrambling for safety, and making off with four victims, two Fulani women and two men, including the senior local government official.
What could have been an even greater tragedy was averted only by the swift and courageous response of military personnel and local volunteers stationed in the town, who engaged the attackers in a fierce gunfight.
The resistance, though heroic, came at a cost. While three of the four abductees were successfully freed and recovered, the gunmen managed to retreat into the surrounding bush with Farounbi firmly in their grip.
For the residents of Ora, Tuesday night’s violence was not an isolated shock, it was the latest chapter in a worsening nightmare that has left the community paralyzed with fear and threatening to hollow out its population entirely.
“Our people did not sleep throughout the night. We are in serious fear,” one resident, who requested anonymity citing security concerns, told our correspondent on Wednesday morning, his voice heavy with exhaustion and dread.
The resident recounted that the gunmen had moved methodically through the town, first firing sporadically to scatter residents before zeroing in on their targets.
“Four people, two Fulani women and two men, including the Ifedayo Local Government Vice Chairman, Debo Farounbi, were abducted,” the source said. “But the resistance put up by the military made the perpetrators abandon three people. They, however, went away with Farounbi.”
The image of a local government official, a democratically elected representative, being dragged into the bush by armed men is one that has shaken not just Ora, but the wider Osun State political establishment.
It raises urgent and uncomfortable questions about the capacity of security agencies to protect public officials and ordinary citizens in Nigeria’s rural border communities.
The Osun State Police Command confirmed the incident on Wednesday. Spokesperson Abiodun Ojelabi, in a terse statement to journalists, acknowledged that efforts were underway to secure Farounbi’s release.
“One person was abducted. He is a local government vice chairman, Hon. Debo Farounbi. Immediately after the incident happened, the military, police, and others responded. Efforts are in place to rescue the man,” Ojelabi said, adding a cautious legal clarification: “It is abduction until we can prove that it is a case of kidnapping.”
The distinction, while procedurally relevant, will offer little comfort to Farounbi’s family, colleagues, and a community that has now watched three sets of kidnappers operate with near-impunity within its borders in rapid succession.
The timeline of attacks on Ora reads less like an accident and more like a sustained, calculated campaign by criminal elements exploiting the community’s geographic vulnerability.
In December 2025, retired Customs officer Emmanuel Owolabi was seized by suspected bandits. He spent nearly four weeks in harrowing captivity before eventually being released in a community in neighboring Kwara State, reportedly following the payment of an undisclosed ransom.
The ransom payment, security analysts have long warned, only emboldens future attacks by signaling that abductions in the area are financially rewarding.
Barely weeks after Owolabi’s release, suspected bandits struck again on February 1, 2026, invading through the Kwara boundary and abducting two more residents of Ora. Those victims, too, were released after approximately four weeks in captivity, their ordeal resolved through means that have not been made public.
And now, Farounbi.
For a community whose name was, until recently, largely unknown beyond its immediate locality, Ora has acquired an unwanted and dangerous notoriety, a soft target on a boundary that criminals appear to treat as a corridor of impunity.
Residents who spoke with new men on Wednesday painted a picture of a town beginning to empty, one frightened family at a time.
A community leader also warned that the situation was reaching a tipping point, while market leader Mrs. Alarape was even more direct in her alarm.
“People are leaving the town. And more people may leave unless something urgent is done to secure us,” she said. “The invaders are coming through our boundary with Kwara State.”
Her words underscore what has become the central security challenge in Ora. The Osun-Kwara boundary, apparently inadequately monitored and patrolled, has become a highway for criminal operatives who strike, abduct, and melt back across the state line before security forces can mount an effective pursuit.
Residents are unanimous in their demand: a stronger, permanent, and proactive security presence, not merely a reactive one that shows up after the gunshots have faded and the victims have been dragged into the bush.
Ora’s ordeal is, in many ways, a microcosm of a broader security crisis gripping rural and boundary communities across Nigeria’s Middle Belt and Southwest.
The emboldening of bandit groups, the exploitation of inter-state jurisdictional gaps by criminal networks, and the inadequate deployment of security resources to vulnerable communities have combined to create environments where ordinary Nigerians live in constant fear for their lives and livelihoods.
That a sitting local government official can be snatched from his community in the dead of night in an area where military and volunteer forces are already stationed is a stark measure of how severe the situation has become.
As of the time of filing this report, Mr. Debo Farounbi remains in captivity. His whereabouts are unknown. Security operatives say they are working to secure his release.
For the people of Ora, who have not slept soundly since Tuesday night, those words will need to be backed by urgent, visible action before more of their neighbors pack up and leave and before the next attack comes.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The abduction of Ifedayo LGA Vice Chairman Debo Farounbi from the Ora community is not an isolated incident; it is the third kidnapping to occur in the same town within seven months, exposing a dangerous and recurring security failure along the Osun-Kwara border.
Criminal elements have clearly identified this boundary community as an easy target, exploiting poor inter-state border surveillance to strike and retreat with impunity.
Until authorities move beyond reactive responses and establish a strong, permanent security presence in Ora, neither lives nor livelihoods in the community are safe, and as residents have already warned, the town risks being abandoned entirely if urgent action is not taken.


















