LOKOJA — The terrifying reality of Nigeria’s unyielding kidnapping epidemic has hit home again in Kogi State, where a distraught father, Samuel Idowu, has thrown himself at the mercy of the public to save his two children from imminent execution.
Armed bandits breached the security of Idowu’s residence in Ijalu Egbe, located within the Yagba West Local Government Area, on June 3, 2026. The attackers abducted his two children and have since maintained a tight grip on the family, leveraging the ultimate threat of death to enforce a staggering ₦200 million ransom demand.
“The kidnappers have given me a deadline to pay ₦200 million or they will kill my two children.”
— Samuel Idowu, appealing for urgent public intervention.
With the kidnappers refusing to budge on their financial demands and the arbitrary deadline drawing dangerously close, the family has been forced to make an open plea for financial assistance and state intervention.
The Yagba West Breach: A Timeline of Terror
The attack on Idowu’s home in Ijalu Egbe underscores a troubling trend of targeted residential invasions in communities that were previously considered relatively secure pockets of Kogi State.
According to community sources and family accounts, the armed band struck under the cover of darkness on June 3, bypassing local vigilante intelligence to target the Idowu home. The operation was swift, violent, and highly coordinated, ending with the abduction of the two minors before any counter-response could be mobilized by local security architecture.
In the weeks since the abduction, the captors have subjected the family to intense psychological warfare through erratic phone negotiations, culminating in the current ₦200 million ultimatum.

The Anatomy of an Unattainable Ransom
For the average Nigerian family, a ₦200 million demand is not just exorbitant—it is an impossible sum. The financial shock highlights the widening gap between the economic capacity of ordinary citizens and the predatory financial models deployed by bandit networks across the Middle Belt and North-Central regions.
| Case Detail | Incident Profile |
| Location of Abduction | Ijalu Egbe, Yagba West LGA, Kogi State |
| Date of Attack | June 3, 2026 |
| Target | Two children of Samuel Idowu |
| Ransom Demanded | ₦200,000,000 |
| Current Status | Extreme threat level; family appealing for public and state rescue |
Policy vs. Survival: The Law Enforcement Dilemma
This latest crisis puts a sharp focus back on the Nigerian government’s official stance on kidnapping. Under current legislation, the payment of ransoms to terrorist groups is strictly criminalized in an effort to starve the illicit industry of funds.
However, on the ground, families like the Idowus are left with agonizing choices. With security forces often hampered by delayed response times, inadequate tracking technology, and vast terrains to comb, families frequently feel they have no option but to turn to crowdsourcing and public appeals to preserve the lives of their loved ones.
Local hunters and vigilante groups in Yagba West have reportedly been combed for leads, but the lack of a centralized, rapid-response military deployment in the border forests between Kogi and Kwara states complicates rescue efforts.
A Cry for Action
As Samuel Idowu’s public appeal gains traction online, pressure is mounting on the Kogi State Government and the State Police Command to act decisively before the kidnappers execute their threat.
For serious observers of Nigeria’s security crisis, the Ijalu Egbe incident is a stark reminder that behind the macro-statistics of national insecurity lie individual human tragedies—where the lives of innocent children are treated as mere commodities in a brutal, multi-million Naira criminal market.









