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THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" - Education - Nairaland

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THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Racoon(op): 10:17am On Jul 10, 2025
The OAU 5 Massacre: A Bloody Chapter in Nigeria’s Campus History
In the cold, dark hours of Saturday, July 10, 1999, the peace of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, was shattered forever. By dawn, five students lay dead in their hostels. Young, brilliant lives, cut down by masked cultists armed with shotguns and machetes.

Their crime was not theft, rebellion, or personal vendetta. Their crime was standing up against a system of silence, terror, and institutional complicity. They had resisted and in response, terror struck.


This event, now remembered as the OAU 5 Massacre, would not only shake the university community to its core; it would rip the veil off the unholy alliance between campus cultism, university authorities, failed justice, and the Nigerian state’s cold indifference to youth blood. What occurred that night was not a spontaneous act of violence. It was the culmination of a dangerous build-up, rooted in the misuse of cult groups as instruments of intimidation—deployed by those in power to silence radical student voices and consolidate institutional control.

The five victims were not just random casualties. They were activists, thinkers, leaders, young Nigerians on the path to greatness. George Akinyemi Iwilade, better known as “Afrika”, was a 500-level law student and General Secretary of the Students’ Union Government. Charismatic, culturally conscious, and fiercely intelligent, Afrika was a symbol of fearless resistance. He had made a bold ideological statement on campus by refusing to wear the Western-style black-and-white attire imposed on law students, instead choosing to attend classes in traditional Yoruba attire, a visual rejection of colonial academic legacies. His activism extended beyond symbolism, he was a warrior for justice, student welfare, and cultural self-definition.

Alongside him died four others. Eviano Ekelemu, a final-year Medical student, bled to death after being shot in the thigh. He had only weeks to complete his degree. Yemi Ajiteru, a first-year Philosophy student, was known for his enthusiasm and potential. Babatunde Oke, popularly called Sabo, was from the Faculty of Agriculture and deeply involved in student causes. And Efe Godspower Ekede, remembered also as Ekpede or Ekelebu, was a quiet, gentle student from the Faculty of Technology. Each of them had dreams. Each of them was silenced by bullets and blades that should never have found their way into a university campus.

But the massacre didn’t begin on July 10. It began months earlier, on March 7, 1999, when the SUG leadership received a tip-off that cult members were gathering for initiation in one of the university’s staff quarters. Led by Lanre Adeleke, the SUG President known as “Legacy,” and Afrika, the General Secretary, a group of students stormed the location. They found and arrested nine cultists, along with firearms, machetes, and the unmistakable regalia of the confraternity. The men confessed to cult membership and revealed, to the students’ horror, that they were under the protection of a senior staff member and the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Wale Omole.

The cultists were promptly handed over to the police and charged in a Magistrate’s Court in Osun State. Yet, in a stunning betrayal, they were released on bail within two weeks. Even more disturbingly, the weapons and other critical evidence disappeared while in police custody. The university took no disciplinary action, and the cultists returned to campus emboldened. The students’ warnings went unheeded. The administration, it seemed, was more concerned with preserving its image than protecting its students.

In the early hours of July 10, 1999, the vengeance arrived. Around 4:30 a.m., over 40 cultists stormed the OAU campus in black clothing and masks. They invaded Awolowo Hall, the stronghold of student activism. The operation was clinical, methodical, and terrifying. The attackers moved with what witnesses described as military precision. They carried a hit list, and Afrika was the first to be executed. He was dragged from his bed and shot in the head. Eviano was shot as he stepped out of the bathroom. Yemi, Sabo, and Efe were murdered in their rooms. Legacy, the union president, narrowly escaped by fleeing through a back corridor.

The assailants retreated as swiftly as they came, leaving the campus in shock and soaked in grief. It was the largest single-day assassination of student leaders in Nigerian history.

By morning, the horror was national news. Students wailed in disbelief, and survivors staggered through bloodied hallways. AIT’s “Campus Circuit” aired raw, heart-wrenching footage of the crime scene—images that burned themselves into the collective memory of a generation. The nation was outraged. But the state, as always, was indifferent. Neither the university nor the Osun State government nor the federal government under President Obasanjo issued any immediate or meaningful response. The security personnel stationed at the university were suspiciously absent during the attack, and some students believed they had been instructed to step aside.

Two of the cultists, Emeka and Efosa, were captured shortly after the massacre. Their confessions led to the arrest of several others. They admitted they had returned to campus to “teach the Union a lesson.” Even more damning was the allegation that they had received ₦350,000 from the university administration to procure the ammunition used in the killings, money allegedly disbursed on July 8, just two days before the massacre. These revelations sparked mass protests and forced the suspension and eventual removal of Vice-Chancellor Wale Omole. But that was the only accountability ever extracted.

The rest was buried.

Despite open confessions, corroborating evidence, and multiple eyewitness testimonies, the judicial process became a theatre of injustice. The case was bungled, the evidence tampered with or erased, and the suspects were quietly released after three years. Not a single conviction was secured. No commission of inquiry was ever established. The university held no official memorial. The Nigerian state, once again, looked away.

To this day, the families of the OAU 5 have received neither justice nor closure. Some of the alleged perpetrators are believed to be living freely—some in public service, others abroad. Survivors of the massacre suffered in silence. Many dropped out, haunted by trauma. Some still live with nightmares and unanswered questions.

And yet, the cultists failed in their mission. They tried to silence a movement but instead, they ignited a revolution.

Rather than instill fear, the massacre galvanized student resistance. Across Nigerian campuses, cultism was no longer seen as a badge of power but a mark of shame. Students began to renounce their cult affiliations publicly. At OAU, July 10 became a sacred day of remembrance, observed each year with poetry, candlelight processions, solidarity marches, and fierce public debates. George “Afrika” Iwilade became a legend, a martyr whose name continues to echo in union chants and classroom discussions. His image adorns murals, his words inspire speeches, and his legacy has become a compass for new generations of student activists.

The massacre of July 10, 1999, is more than a tragic chapter—it is a defining moment in the long struggle against state-backed terror and institutional impunity in Nigeria. It reminds us of the dangers of silence. It warns us of what happens when complicity replaces conscience.

Let July 10 forever stand as a day of remembrance—not just for those who died, but for the ideals they represented: courage, justice, cultural pride, and youth resistance. Let it remind us that no nation can prosper when it buries its brightest sons and daughters without accountability. Let it remind us that the blood of patriots, though spilled, waters the tree of freedom.

Afrika and his comrades are not forgotten. They live on in every struggle for justice. They breathe in every act of defiance against oppression.

To the OAU 5, Afrika, Eviano, Yemi, Sabo, and Efe—your blood was not in vain.

Aluta Continua. Victoria Ascerta. ✊✊✊✊✊

#history_daily
https://www.facebook.com/share/1DG1qjvW75/ nlfpm.od

Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Racoon(op):
I remember this ugly incident very well. God rest the prescious souls of these young men that were cut in their prime. Sadly their killers never face justice. So sad! Too bad!

The next year(2000), it was the turn of UI wherein some inmates of Queen Elizabeth Hall were gruesomely killed too by cultists. UniBen, UNN those days. Chai! God abeg.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Racoon(op):
The massacre of July 10, 1999, is more than a tragic chapter—it is a defining moment in the long struggle against state-backed terror and institutional impunity in Nigeria.

It reminds us of the dangers of silence. It warns us of what happens when complicity replaces conscience...
This has been a generational problem with the leadership of this nation. Seething problems are never nipped in the bud until they erupt and do maximum damage. cc; nlfpmod
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by meobizy(m): 11:06am On Jul 10, 2025
Human life has no worth in populous nations. Events of this sort take place today and nobody bates an eyelid. Life continues.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by favor914: 11:20am On Jul 10, 2025
Racoon:
I remember this ugly incident very well. God rest the prescious souls of these young men that were cut in their prime.

The next year(2000), it was the turn of UI wherein some inmates of Queen Elizabeth Hall were gruesomely killed too by cultists. UniBen, UNN those days. Chai! God abeg.
Aged Man racoon, we know as usual u are still blaming President Tinubu for the incidents in Ife & Ibadan?
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by oluwaseyi0: 6:40pm On Jul 11, 2025
Cultistism alongside drugs has always been the bane of our youths
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Yorubastardz: 6:41pm On Jul 11, 2025
Whole Soyinka s only contribution to humankind.. SMH very sad for him .

A whole legacy stained with blood of countless youths who took Whole Soyinkas idea as living faith and ethos.

Old man is clocking 90
His disciples barely reached 25 years
All dead and butchered at their prime.

Not even his noble prize can save him from the countless bloods lost under his idea of Cultism.

But what do I know...🤷
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by happney65: 6:43pm On Jul 11, 2025
I like how in the era of SM,it has given this incident more publicity and it is being celebrated every year

When it happened and NTA reported about it almost every night,wè were always glued to our TV sets to be on the lookout for the court proceedings and the case was discussed in living rooms all over the country

I heard that new students of OAU are always being regaled with that incident of that night at their freshers night every year. To immortalise Afrika and others

May their soul continue to rest in peace
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by njokuuche77(m): 6:43pm On Jul 11, 2025
Complaints to or against moderators must be sent privately. Please don't disobey, disrespect, or defame them.
21. Please spell words correctly when you post, and try to use perfect grammar and punctuation.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Goo0dHardDick: 6:45pm On Jul 11, 2025
Wole Soyinka legacy.

Man is even yet to criticise tinubu till date. Wole Soyinka has done a lot of evil to humanity
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by lastmessenger: 6:47pm On Jul 11, 2025
The only thing is want to remind you all is that wole soyinka brought cultism to Nigerian universities
He also helped buhari to gain power in Nigeria.
Observe the man and the negative impact he made in Nigeria. Big english no be everything
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by id4sho(m): 6:47pm On Jul 11, 2025
What's the benefit of been a gangsters. Just killing each other and living in fear🤦
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Habbeyy(m): 6:47pm On Jul 11, 2025
Ugly incident that shook the nation. The memory lives on
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Smartcitizen: 6:47pm On Jul 11, 2025
Yoruba people and cultism nawaoo!

They are the people who destroyed Nigerian high institutions with this useless entities and they are still the people who will shout first as it has lost control.

What a hypocritical people?

What a race?


🥱🥱🥱🥱🥱
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Yemmysworld91: 6:49pm On Jul 11, 2025
Yorubastardz:
Whole Soyinka s only contribution to humankind.. SMH

Not even his noble prize can save him from the countless bloods lost under his idea of Cultism.
You people need to stop being myopic. Wole sonyika didn't create pyrates for cultism, it was aimed for Freedom from the colonialist. Read up and stop this biased assumption
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by santopelele(m): 6:55pm On Jul 11, 2025
Wole soyinka only legacy. Wole soyinka will definetely burn in hell in the last day of his life
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by atobs4real(m): 7:02pm On Jul 11, 2025
See evil leaders everywhere. The VC failed woefully by not doing the needs
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by atobs4real(m): 7:03pm On Jul 11, 2025
See evil leaders everywhere. The VC failed woefully by not doing the needs.
So sad, the families will never forget and some may have even died as a result of the trauma caused by the management of OAU
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by gloryman91(m): 7:05pm On Jul 11, 2025
Dark Days OAU

This una forty characters nawa o.

Please Seun add the remaining jare.
I don talk my own.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by kingthreat(m): 7:08pm On Jul 11, 2025
We all know the cult that was behind this mayhem. It is the same cult that musicians are flying their signs everywhere and every untamed young boy wants to be initiated to so they can belong. It's sad that cultism is no longer just in the higher institutions. It is everywhere even amongst those in diaspora. Please say no to cultism. You inherit a war you do not deserve.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by PDPdestroyer(m): 7:32pm On Jul 11, 2025
Yemmysworld91:
You people need to stop being myopic. Wole sonyika didn't create pyrates for cultism, it was aimed for Freedom from the colonialist. Read up and stop this biased assumption
You don’t know these people. They’re doing all the revisionism and deliberate misinformation because Soyinka didn’t support PitObi in 2023. He’s been a subject of constant attacks since then, just as Adeboye
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by boxypane: 7:33pm On Jul 11, 2025
GREAT IFE!!! My alma mater
May the souls of the fallen continue to rest in peace. Your ultimate sacrifice brought freedom to Ife.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Belleful: 7:37pm On Jul 11, 2025
. They found and arrested nine cultists, along with firearms, machetes, and the unmistakable regalia of the confraternity.

How did they disarm the cultists with firearms?
This story no clear well to me....
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by armyofone(m): 7:41pm On Jul 11, 2025
Those involved - I wonder their lives today. Married with children, working, living well, asked for forgiveness, doing God's will of a changed life ?
Just wondering.

happney65:
I like how in the era of SM,it has given this incident more publicity and it is being celebrated every year

When it happened and NTA reported about it almost every night,wè were always glued to our TV sets to be on the lookout for the court proceedings and the case was discussed in living rooms all over the country

I heard that new students of OAU are always being regaled with that incident of that night at their freshers night every year. To immortalise Afrika and others

May their soul continue to rest in peace
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Edusouls(m): 7:51pm On Jul 11, 2025
Yorubastardz:
Whole Soyinka s only contribution to humankind.. SMH very sad for him .

A whole legacy stained with blood of countless youths who took Whole Soyinkas idea as living faith and ethos.

Old man is clocking 90
His disciples barely reached 25 years
All dead and butchered at their prime.

Not even his noble prize can save him from the countless bloods lost under his idea of Cultism.

But what do I know...🤷
even if u live up to 500 years on earth it’s like a drop of water in the ocean compared with the afterlife, that’s were all scores are settled, we don’t yet understand what awaits in the afterlife, it still looks like fairytale to us
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Osanoghodua1: 8:13pm On Jul 11, 2025
May God help Nigeria and deliver us in Jesus name. I heard Efosa was rusticated from Uniben and moved to OAU.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by treatise: 8:16pm On Jul 11, 2025
Racoon:
I remember this ugly incident very well. God rest the prescious souls of these young men that were cut in their prime. Sadly their killers never face justice. So sad! Too bad!

The next year(2000), it was the turn of UI wherein some inmates of Queen Elizabeth Hall were gruesomely killed too by cultists. UniBen, UNN those days. Chai! God abeg.
You've forgotten to add Ekpoma which notoriety was unforgiven.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by boxypane: 8:17pm On Jul 11, 2025
This page was created to honour those paid the ultimate sacrifice. Not for children please.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by raumdeuter: 8:19pm On Jul 11, 2025
armyofone:
Those involved - I wonder their lives today. Married with children, working, living well, asked for forgiveness, doing God's will of a changed life ?
Just wondering.
Sadly many of them are living their lives like nothing happened
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Kdon2: 8:36pm On Jul 11, 2025
Smartcitizen:
Yoruba people and cultism nawaoo!

They are the people who destroyed Nigerian high institutions with this useless entities and they are still the people who will shout first as it has lost control.

What a hypocritical people?

What a race?


🥱🥱🥱🥱🥱
Typical yorubaphobia.
Get well soon o

Not enough original content
Please take a moment to write a quality post with at least 40 characters.
This will make the forum more interesting for everyone.
Re: THROWBACK; "Remembering The OAU 5 Massacre Of July 10, 1999" by Smartcitizen: 9:32pm On Jul 11, 2025
Kdon2:
Typical yorubaphobia.
Get well soon o

Not enough original content
Please take a moment to write a quality post with at least 40 characters.
This will make the forum more interesting for everyone.
Hmmm!

Yorubas brought cultism into Nigerian higher institution true or false?

Is hypocrisy really part of your tradition please?

I'm just wondering o!

🥱🥱🥱🥱🥱
1 2 Reply

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