A nine-year-old boy has regained his freedom after enduring three harrowing weeks in the hands of armed kidnappers in the restive Ose Local Government Area of Ondo State, in what authorities are describing as a successful culmination of a determined, multi-agency rescue operation.
Victor Oluwatobi, the young son of a local pastor, was safely rescued on Sunday and reunited with his family, bringing relief to a household that had lived in anguish since the night of June 5, 2026, when gunmen descended on Ugbosi Quarters in the community of Idogun under the cover of darkness.
Armed men stormed the community in what appeared to be a targeted operation, with a local landlord believed to have been their primary quarry. The landlord, however, managed to evade his would-be captors in the ensuing chaos, a narrow escape that may well have saved his life.
But the attackers, apparently undeterred by their failure to seize their intended target, wreaked havoc on the community before departing. Two buildings were reportedly demolished during the invasion, a brazen show of force that spoke to the audacity and ruthlessness of the criminal gang behind the attack.
In the pandemonium that gripped the neighborhood that night, Pastor Oluwatobi, a man of God thrust into every parent’s worst nightmare, scrambled to get his children to safety.
Tragically, in the frantic rush, one child was left behind: Victor, who had been asleep and could not be roused and moved in time. The assailants found the boy and whisked him away into the night.
News of the abduction sent shockwaves through the community and reached the corridors of the Ondo State Government with swiftness. Authorities wasted little time mobilizing a response, assembling a formidable joint security operation that brought together personnel from the Nigerian Army, the Nigeria Police Force, the Ondo State Security Network, widely known as the Amotekun Corps, and local vigilante groups with intimate knowledge of the terrain.
Search teams fanned out across dense forests and surrounding communities, conducting what sources described as extensive and relentless operations day and night in pursuit of the kidnappers and their young hostage.
For three long weeks, Victor’s family waited. For three long weeks, his father, a pastor whose faith must have been tested to its very limits, prayed and hoped. The community of Idogun held its collective breath.
Then, on Sunday, the breakthrough came.
Security operatives successfully located and freed Victor Oluwatobi, recovering him unharmed and in one piece, a detail that will bring particular relief to a state that has seen kidnapping victims return in far worse conditions, if they return at all. The boy was swiftly reunited with his family, ending a 21-day ordeal that no child should ever have to endure.
The Ondo State Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Idowu Ajanaku, confirmed the rescue, offering commendation to the security operatives and the many individuals whose efforts, seen and unseen, contributed to the successful outcome.
Victor’s ordeal, while it has ended on a merciful note, casts a renewed spotlight on the persistent threat of kidnapping and rural insecurity in Ondo State and the broader South-West geopolitical zone of Nigeria.
The Ose Local Government Area, like many communities situated along the fringes of dense forest reserves, has long been vulnerable to incursions by criminal elements who exploit the cover of thick vegetation to carry out abductions and evade capture.
The willingness of these gunmen to target a child and to destroy property in the process of pursuing a grown man signals an increasingly brazen criminal enterprise that demands sustained security attention beyond the conclusion of this particular rescue mission.
For now, however, one family is whole again. Victor Oluwatobi is home. And in Idogun, at least for this moment, there is cause for quiet, grateful relief.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nine-year-old Victor Oluwatobi, abducted from his home in Idogun, Ondo State, on June 5, 2026, while his pastor father fled a midnight raid, has been rescued unharmed after three weeks in captivity.
His freedom was secured through a coordinated joint operation involving the army, police, Amotekun Corps, and local vigilantes, a rare but welcome example of inter-agency security collaboration delivering results.





















