Two
brothers, Kunmi and Adeniyi Adetokun died within days of each late last
year in Oyo state and family members say it was after they slept with
their uncles' wives.
The
uncle, is accused of killing the brothers with a deadly anti-adultery
charm commonly known as Magun. He was attacked and nearly killed by
irate youths following the death of the second brother. He is lying
critically ill in a hospital in Ibadan.
Tribune reports the full
story. Find it below...
The incident happened at Jagun community near
Iyana Ofa, Lagelu Local Government Area of Oyo State towards the end of
2013 when two blood brothers, Kunmi and Adeniyi Adetokun, died, one
after the other, within three days, allegedly of a local charm used to
punish adulterous men, commonly referred to as magun in Yoruba.
This
literally translates ‘don’t climb’ in English. But the two brothers
climbed the metaphorical mountains that were too high for them. And they
somersaulted down the hills, breaking their necks in the process. The
occurrence, however, sparked off anger among the youth of the community,
resulting in them setting ablaze the residence of the Balogun of the
community, Chief Segun Oyetade, the deceased’s uncle, as he was
suspected to have been responsible for the duo’s death.
They also
attacked him with weapons but was only saved when the youth got a hint
that policemen were approaching. The scene opened on Monday, December 2,
2013 when Kunmi reportedly died after having sex with a woman allegedly
laced with magun and who was said to be his aunt-in-law. The woman was
said to be his uncle’s wife.
On December 5, three days after
Kunmi’s death, his younger brother, Adeniyi, was also reported to have
died of unknown ailment which he battled with for a couple of weeks
after allegedly sleeping with the wife of Chief Oyetade’s brother, whose
name was given simply as Femi.
According to the information
gathered by Saturday Tribune, Niyi was the one who fell ill first after
he slumped and started vomitting blood. His brother, Kunmi, was
reportedly taking care of him at a hospital at Lalupon community.
It
was further learnt that Kunmi left Niyi at Lalupon and went to Jagun
community where he allegedly had sex with his uncle’s wife. His own
illness did not take much time before it consumed him and he died three
days after it manifested. Having noticed this, Niyi reportedly opened up
that he slept with Femi’s wife, which confirmed the suspicion of the
villagers that he must have been hit with the deadly charm.
A
member of the community described the type of magun used on Niyi as
Olorere which usually takes days or weeks before killing the man who
sleeps with the woman laced with such.
After Kunmi’s death, Chief
Oyetade was reportedly summoned by the Baale of Jagun community, Chief
Isiaka Akinpelu, who asked him about the allegation that he laced his
wife with magun. The man denied and the Baale appealed to him to find
the antidote so that Niyi could be healed.
The Balogun reportedly
came back to the village head to demand for N4,000 which he said was the
fee demanded by the herbalist who volunteered to prepare the antidote.
Members of the community were said to have contributed the money but
before he brought it, Niyi gave up the ghost.
Niyi’s death after
his brother’s spurred the community’s anger as Chief Oyetade was also
accused of sleeping with the mother of the two brothers, which prompted
the question on why he should be angry that someone was having an affair
with his wife or his brother’s wife, to the extent that he could aim at
killing the brothers.
The anger led to the attack on him while
his house was set on fire and his wife and children sent out of the
community in the dead of the night.
Chief Isiaka Akinpelu, who was
said to have got a hint of the youth’s plan to attack Chief Oyetade,
had reportedly gone to Iyana Ofa Police Division to quickly give the
information to the police but before they got back to the village, the
youth had struck. As they saw the approaching policemen, they were said
to have fled in different directions, leaving the injured chief to his
fate.
However, Chief Oyetade, during an interview with Saturday
Tribune on hospital bed where he was receiving treatment, alleged that
it was the Baale who sent the youth to attack him because of a tussle
between them over a piece of land.
He denied the allegation that
he laced the women with magun, saying that his accusers were only trying
to tarnish his image. “What I only heard was that Niyi was sick, but I
didn’t know the kind of ailment because he was living at Lalupon. Later
the Baale called me and some elders, saying that my nephew, Femi, laced
his wife with magun, which resulted in Niyi’s illness. I didn’t believe
the allegation because Niyi had been ill for some weeks and from the
story we used to hear about magun, it doesn’t take so long before being
felt.
“They went further to say that I was the one who gave Femi
the magun which he laced his wife with, accusing me of doing same for my
wife, which led to Kunmi’s death. I exclaimed in shock, disclosing that
my wife was pregnant and wondering how one would lace a pregnant woman
with a charm such as magun.
“It was after this that Chief Akinpelu
said he was after the wellness of Niyi, tasking me and the head of
Niyi’s family, one Mr Adewale Adekambi, to go and look for the antidote.
By then, Niyi was being cared for in Ibadan and it was Ibadan we went
to seek the antidote. Unfortunately, Niyi died on Thursday, December 5.
I
joined Niyi’s sibling, Seun and his aunt in taking the corpse away from
where he died. As we wanted to take him to the cemetery, his brother
said we should take him home, unknown to me that it was a trap set for
me. As soon as I disembarked from the vehicle, hoodlums descended on me
with sticks, pestle and cutlasses. I kept asking them of my offence and
when they saw that I did not collapse, one of them struck me with an axe
on the head and I fell down.
“A sympathiser called the Baale to
inform him of what happened to me but before he came, I was already
crawling away. A community member saw me and jeered at me, saying:
‘Where are you going? Your house and property are still going for it.’
He
said the disagreement between him and Chief Akinpelu occurred when he
sold his own father’s parcel of land and the Baale challenged him by
saying that he did not inform him. “He has no business with the land. My
brother and I agreed before the land was sold and it belonged to our
father,” Chief Oyetade said.
Saturday Tribune gathered that the
police detectives, led by the Divisional Police Officer, Iyana Ofa, Mrs
Justina Ogunleye, took the victim to a nearby hospital for medical
treatment.
Chief Oyetade’s wife, Rachael, also narrated her ordeal
thus: “I was invited by the Baale and he asked me about Kunmi’s death. I
told him that I did not know anything about it. I also swore in the
presence of the elders seated, asking if anyone of them had ever seen my
nakedness. It was when I was raining curses that the Baale asked me to
go.
“On Thursday, December 5, my husband travelled to Ibadan and
told me he was not coming back. At about 11:00p.m., I heard a knock on
my door and when I opened, I saw four men who asked me to leave with my
children without picking a pin, threatening that if I delayed, they
would burn us with the house.
“I slept in the bush with my
children, among who was a two-year-old, and at dawn, we trekked to a
town near Ibadan, from where we took a bike to Iyana-Ofa. From there, I
boarded a bus to Ibadan. I tried to contact my husband but could not get
him. It was later I learnt that he had been attacked.”
When
contacted, the police spokesperson in Oyo State, DSP Olabisi
Okuwobi-Ilobanafor, confirmed the development, disclosing that two of
the suspected arsonists and attackers had been arrested. She added that
the Commissioner of Police, Mohammed Indabawa, had ordered that the case
be transferred to the State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID),
Iyaganku, Ibadan, for further investigation.
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