Six feared dead as security agents open fire on Ilorin Covid-19 looters

Six feared dead as security agents open fire on Ilorin Covid-19 looters

About six people have been reportedly killed on Friday evening after Nigerian security forces opened fire on looters at a warehouse holding Covid-19 p

Official explains why Osun was yet to distribute Covid-19 palliatives
I was planning to share the looted COVID19 palliatives on my birthday – Hon Agunbiade
Looted palliatives kept for vulnerable Nigerians – Governors

About six people have been reportedly killed on Friday evening after Nigerian security forces opened fire on looters at a warehouse holding Covid-19 palliatives. The incident has sent Ilorin into tension.

Witnesses said soldiers and police officers were amongst the security agents who opened live rounds on the warehouse after being called in by state authorities.

It came as COVID-19 warehouses are being uncovered in Lagos and other parts of the country, prompting citizens to besiege and loot them.

Thousands of people in Ilorin in the early hours of Friday, mainly youths, stormed a warehouse where the Covid-19 palliatives were kept by the State government.

The warehouse, located inside the Ilorin International Airport, was bombarded by the people who got to know that the government was sharing some food items around Agric area of the city. Having received information that the items being shared were transported from the main warehouse, a large crowd proceeded to the airport and forced their way through, overpowering the security on guard.

Meanwhile, the Kwara State government has condemned the attack on the warehouse, stating that such attitude does not reflect the good nature of the people of the State. In a statement by the Commissioner for Communications, Harriet Afolabi-Oshatimehin, the government said the larger part of the palliatives were already distributed and that the looted leftovers were meant for only 1 local government and the most vulnerable amongst the citizens.

The remaining palliatives in the terminal, which the hoodlums preyed on until chased away by security agencies, were meant for special vulnerable groups and just one local government where names of the beneficiaries have just been delivered and officials have started distributing when the street urchins breached the wall of the facility,” she said.

“It would be recalled that the CACOVID and the state government had since September 23rd flagged off the distribution of the palliatives. But it was meant for specific households, as dictated by CACOVID, and so names had to be properly generated to allow for transparent and orderly distribution. The actions of the hoodlums are condemnable and those already arrested would face the full weight of the law. The government would not tolerate anyone hiding under any guise to disrupt the peaceful atmosphere in the state. The government commends the security agencies for acting with restraint in the face of provocation by the hoodlums.”