For centuries, the palace in Nigeria was more than a residence. It was a sanctuary, a sacred space where the throne stood above ordinary conflict. Across cultures and religions, the traditional ruler was regarded as untouchable, a custodian of heritage and authority whose presence anchored the community. The palace was not fortified with weapons or walls; it was fortified by reverence. That understanding has now collapsed.
Armed groups have buried the sanctity of the throne one abducted king at a time, one assassinated Oba at a time. What was once inviolable has become vulnerable. The palace is no longer a sanctuary but a target. The throne is no longer untouchable but a prize. And into this void, fear has taken root.
Across the South-West and Kwara State, more than sixty traditional rulers have fled their thrones. Some have been killed, others remain in captivity, and many now live in exile far from the communities they once anchored. The forests grow bolder, and the Nigerian state watches in silence. Communities are stripped of the institution that gave them identity, cohesion, and hope.
The killings are deliberate and calculated. Oba Olatunde Samuel Olusola, the Onimojo of Imojo-Ekiti, and Oba David Babatunde Ogunsakin, the Elesun of Esun-Ekiti, were ambushed and murdered while returning from a security meeting. Oba Adegoke Adeusi, the Olufon of Ifon, was assassinated in a targeted attack. Oba Adeniyi Adelana of Ode-Oriya was abducted from his palace itself, dragged from the symbolic heart of his community. In Kwara, monarchs from Afin, Oreke, Alabe, Ganmu, Igbo Agbon, and others have fled, leaving thrones empty and communities adrift. These are not accidents. The throne itself has become the target.
But this crisis is not confined to the South-West. In Kaduna State, the Emir of Kajuru, Alhaji Alhassan Adamu, was kidnapped in July 2021 when over 200 armed bandits stormed his palace in the early hours of the morning. The 83-year-old monarch, frail in health, was released after one day to facilitate ransom negotiations, but ten members of his family remained in captivity. In Sokoto State, the Emir of Gobir, Alhaji Isa Muhammad Bawa, was ambushed in July 2024 alongside his son. The bandits demanded a staggering one billion naira ransom. A heartbreaking video showed the 73-year-old monarch pleading for government intervention. When negotiations stalled, he was shot dead in August 2024. In Kwara State, the Emir of Yashikira, Alhaji Umar Sariki Seroke II, faced a violent midnight raid in May 2026. His palace was vandalized, and ten people, including his wives and children, were abducted. These attacks show that the throne is under siege across Nigeria, from the South-West to the North-West and North-Central.
Kidnappers understand the cultural weight of the crown. Ransoms for rulers range from tens of millions to hundreds of millions of naira. The abduction of a king or emir generates immediate communal pressure to pay, and criminal networks exploit this ruthlessly. They have established permanent forest camps, armed with AK-47s and military-grade weapons, far beyond the capacity of local vigilantes with dane guns and machetes. It is not a contest. It is a massacre waiting to happen. Each ransom paid funds the next operation. Each empty palace emboldens the next invasion.
Even generals have fallen. A retired Nigerian Army general was kidnapped and later died in captivity; his wife remains with the abductors. Two serving generals have also lost their lives in the widening crisis. In February 2025, retired Brigadier General Maharazu Tsiga was kidnapped in Katsina State and held for fifty-six days before being released. If the military cannot protect its own, what hope remains for civilians?
The Nigerian military has shown in the past that it does not hesitate to invade communities when even a single soldier is killed. In Udi and Zaki-Biam, the loss of soldiers triggered overwhelming force, and many innocent citizens paid the price. As much as those invasions remain controversial and tragic, they demonstrated the military’s instinct to retaliate swiftly. Yet today, after losing two generals, other senior officers, and even a retired general to bandits, the same decisive action is absent. If reports of the release of the late retired general’s wife are true, then God bless the military for that success. But the larger truth remains: unless the military retaliates the death of every single soldier, these criminal groups will continue their acts with impunity.
The illusion that insecurity is “someone else’s problem” has collapsed. The South-West, Nigeria’s economic heartland, is under infiltration. Lagos, Ibadan, Akure — cities once thought immune — are now within reach of the same forces that emptied the palaces of the North-Central. When an Oba or Emir flees, the community loses its anchor. Into that void, criminals do not merely operate; they govern, tax, and recruit. The empty throne is not just a symbol. It is the gateway to bandit authority. Communities without their rulers become communities without resistance, and the forests become ungoverned territories where criminals rule.
Nigeria is not yet a failed state, but its authority is being hollowed out. Permanent criminal camps on sovereign soil, traditional rulers unable to function, generals kidnapped and dying in captivity — each is a sign of a republic losing its grip. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s blunt prescription rings true: stop pleading, stop negotiating, confront. The current approach of ransom-funded coexistence has failed. Every press statement without operational follow-through confirms to the criminal networks that they operate in a permissive environment.
The Obas and Emirs did not flee out of cowardice. They fled because they concluded, rationally, that the state could not protect them. That is the most damning indictment of government: that its most prominent citizens made a rational calculation that the state offers them no protection. The palace must not remain empty. If it does, it is not just the throne that is vacant. It is Nigeria itself — hollowed by inaction, surrendered to criminals one kidnapped king at a time.
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