fd28456f-43e5-4e9d-885e-de2f64c6e941 a5b53aca-b80f-4503-a9ae-e138364af4b0
After lodging in a hotel, I boarded an okada to the venue when a salon car carrying fierce-looking boys began chasing us along the lonely Umuguma road. As the rider sped recklessly through deep potholes and rugged bumps with fear wrapped around us like smoke, the men screamed repeatedly, “Drop her, I go shoot ooo!”
The motorcyclist ignored them and raced on like a man escaping the claws of death until we narrowly escaped. That terrifying moment, which once felt like a mere close shave, now echoes like a grim prophecy fulfilled.
Last Saturday evening, May 16, sorrow again knocked on the doors of Umuguma as suspected kidnappers engaged local security operatives in a fierce gun battle at Ogbosisi village.
By the time the dust settled, one security personnel had been felled by bullets while another was left battling for survival in the hospital.
Residents say the once bubbling community suddenly became as silent as a graveyard, with panic hanging in the air like heavy harmattan haze.
Sadly, the incident is no longer isolated. From parts of Owerri zone to other communities across the state, stories of abductions, violent attacks and armed confrontations have become recurring headlines, forcing many residents to live in fear and uncertainty.
The President General of Umuguma Town Union, Oparaeke Blessing Oguchi, while mourning the slain operative and sympathising with affected families, disclosed that he was also battling personal grief following the death of his mother on May 14.
Yet amid the double tragedy, he urged residents to remain steadfast and prayerful. As Chinua Achebe once wrote, “A man who makes trouble for others is also making trouble for himself.”
Many observers believe the worsening insecurity in Imo State is being fuelled by rising unemployment, desperation among youths, weak intelligence gathering and the gradual collapse of communal vigilance systems that once kept villages safe.
Like a disease ignored for too long, the menace appears to be spreading deeper into the social fabric of the state.
Beyond tears and condolences, residents are now demanding practical solutions, stronger community policing, improved collaboration with security agencies, youth engagement programmes and prompt response to distress calls before innocent blood continues to stain the soil.
For the bereaved families, especially the loved ones of the slain operative, the pain will linger long after the gunshots have faded into silence.
But perhaps the greatest tribute to the dead would be for government and communities to act swiftly, so that Umuguma does not become another name added to the growing list of communities held hostage by fear.
Leave a comment