Alawunmi Oluwafemi is a popular cultist who
claims to have killed over 60 people as the hitman of the Aye Fraternity. The was
the most wanted man in Ogun state, who have most times evaded police for years.
Three
33-year-old was finally captured last week at
Ijebu Ode by the operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, Ogun
State police command after a gun battle.
Oluwafemi told The Saturday Sun the story of his life
as an axe man in the underworld and how he killed more than 60 men and women.
You won't believe his story. Read after the cut...
The hunt
Saturday Sun
gathered that the inability to arrest the suspect led to the transfer of
several police area commanders out of Ijebu Ode.
Disturbed by
his exploits, the Ogun State Commissioner of Police, Ikemefuna Okoye directed
the SARS team to relocate to Ijebu-Ode and fish Oluwafemi out at all costs. As
a result, the team led by SP Mohammed Tijiani eventually succeeded in tracking
down ‘the big fish’ on October 6 during the Ojude Oba festival.
According to
CP Ikemefuna, members of Oluwafemi’s gang put up a resistance and a gun battle
ensued. Eventually, he was arrested after he was shot in the leg. “He is not
only a cultist but also a serial killer. He has confessed that he had led his
gang to kill not less than 60 people”, Ikemefuna stated. The police boss, who
described the arrest of Oluwafemi as a major breakthrough for the command,
accused him of masterminding the spate of cult related killings in Ijebu Igbo
and Ijebu Ode axis in the last three months. Subdued, the suspect argued that
the police were able to arrest him because his charms, which were always in his
pocket, were left at home on the fateful day. “I never knew that anyone will be
looking for me on a day like this”, he said.
Faulty
background
Just like
most criminals, Oluwafemi is from a broken home. The little he could remember
of his family was that of chaos which led to the exit of his mother when he was
eight years old. “When my mother left, I stayed back with my father and
assisted him in the shrine. It was there that I knew how to make potent charms.
After his death in the 90s, I moved over to stay with my mother who also died
years later. I had no choice but to move over and live with my maternal
grandmother who is based in Ondo. She also died few years after I moved in to
stay with her. My only alternative was my paternal grandmother who is based in
Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State. It was in her house that I stayed and learnt how to cut
wood and was able to secure a job in one of the sawmills.
“It was when
she died that I knew that I had to survive by all possible means. I was able to
get married but when my wife discovered that my lifestyle was not good, she
left and followed another man. From that day till sometime in 2009, I have been
in and out of different odd jobs just to make ends meet.”
His
initiation
In his
so-called attempt to survive, Oluwafemi joined bad gangs. “I needed to survive,
so I did everything possible. Sometime in 2009, a friend of mine, Ahmed invited
me over for a birthday party at Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State. At about 8pm, he asked
me to escort him to see a friend who was also celebrating his birthday. I was
surprised when he started entering a bush close to Olabisi Onabanjo University.
I was about to ask him what his friend would be doing there, when some young
men emerged from the bush and started beating me up.
“They
overpowered me and threatened to shoot if I dare to run away. It was then that
Ahmed told me that I was actually on my way to participate in the Aye
initiation ceremony. There were so many of us who were beaten. They blindfolded
us and marched us further into the bush. It was when we finally stopped that I
saw the crowd of young men who came for the initiation, most of them were
students. They kept beating us and forced us to lie on the floor, while they
marched on our bodies.
“Later, they
brought kolanut and pierced our hands with razor blade. We were forced to eat
the kolanut mixed with our blood as a sign of oath-taking. We were given new
names and mine was Aye Skyppo. At about 4am, we were handed over to those who
brought us to the initiation camp”, he narrated.
Orientation
After
initiation, Oluwafemi said he was taken away by his friend who took him to a
house where he took his bath and changed his dress. He was then taught some of
the things he needed to know as a member of the Aye fraternity cult. “It is
known as orientation, where the person who introduced you will tell you the
rules and regulations. The first and most important is that if you reveal their
secret, you will die. The members of the cult will hunt you down and kill you.
I was also taught some of the nicknames used among cult members. For instance,
to shoot means to light someone up. If you hear a sentence like, Femi light
him up, it means that you should shoot. Gun is known as four, fire as erayo,
matchet as meche, freedom as axe, stab as enter, cartridge as red nut.”
Beginning of
bloodbath
He claimed
that he was advised to secure a gun for his personal safety. “Sometime in 2010,
there was a clash between Aye and another cult group known as Eiye. One of our
members who was a student was killed, and there was a mandate to hack down
anyone who is from Eiye. “I was always going around with a gun, anytime there
is crisis. I bought it at a price of N12,500 from Ondo State. This was necessary
in case there was any attack. In 2010 during Olabisi Onabanjo University
matriculation ceremony, we were assigned to retaliate. As soon as we spotted
one Eiye member who was vulnerable, we attacked and stabbed him till the police
rescued him. He later died on the way while most of us were arrested and
remanded in prison. I was in prison for a year and some months before I was
granted bail. The case was later struck out because it was a cultism case and
since I had spent sometime in the prison, I was free to go.”
Back home,
Oluwafemi claimed that he wanted to stay completely away from the group but
when Ahmed learnt that he was free, he tracked him down. “Ahmed told me that if
I stay away from them, I would be endangering my life as the other cult group
might come after me since I had already stained my hands with their blood. I
had no choice but to go back but I decided to fortify myself. My late father
was a native doctor and I have seen him prepare charms for people. All I did
was to get the eyelid of a cat, cotton, black and white thread and mixed it
with my urine before I dried it up. It was the reason till date, they have not
been able to arrest me or kill me. I was arrested this time because I did not
come out with the charm, since there was peace among the various cult groups in
the area.”
According to
him, he rose in ranks and was named Femi Kuti since all attempts to kill him
failed. “I am not making mouth or celebrating my success, you can ask
questions. I have been shot at close range severally and stabbed without any
injury. This was why they named me Femi Kuti, meaning ‘he that cannot be
killed’. I impressed them so much that I was later called Badoo. Normally the
overall leader of the group must be a student. We that are not undergraduates
are still under them but do the main hits. If there is any clash, it is people
like us that are contacted to go and kill because we cannot be easily traced.
The students, if caught, will be expelled and that is not good because most of
them are our sponsors. They are the ones whose duty it is to sponsor the cult,
that is why the leader must be a student.” Throwing more light on how they
managed to initiate students, Oluwafemi said that their targets are normally
boys from very rich homes. “They love life and can be found wherever there is a
party. You promise them power and security and they will gladly follow you
anywhere. Just as I told you, I was lured into the bush because I thought that
there was a bigger party there. We do the dirty jobs while they fund the
fraternity. Most of them are the ones that are killed because they do not have
the experience to protect themselves”
Serial
killings
He admitted
that he cannot remember all, but all those that were killed were young men who
were members of another cult. “Once there is a clash, they will declare war
which means that that I am free to kill. They depended on me so much to deliver
whenever there is a clash which is normally paid for with human blood. In 2014,
I led the team that killed someone at 911 club at Ijebu-Ode, I gunned down
another at Ibadan garage, I also killed one Seun along Benin expressway. I do
not know where to start but to ask God to forgive me and give me another chance
to live a better life. I know that I have killed more than 60 people but all of
them are cultists or unclean people who must have soiled their hands one way or
the other. All I want now is for God to forgive me and wash my hands clean of
their blood”
On how he
was arrested, Oluwafemi said he never knew that the person who was calling him
on the phone was a policeman. “They tracked me down and lured me out to the
open. We were there for the Ojude Oba festival which is supposed to be
peaceful. Although my boys tried their best to protect me, they were
overpowered by the police who later handcuffed me. The truth is that I did not
come out with my charm and besides, if there was any problem among cult
members, I will not come out in the open.”
On how he
has survived till now, he said since his parents and grandparents were
deceased, he has chosen the path of crime because he cannot be engaged in
anything meaningful. “I started selling hard drugs especially the one known as
Skunk which is stronger than cocaine. Among us, it is known as bible because of
the shape. I normally buy one at the cost of N15,000, I will grind and wrap it
in a paper at N100 per wrap. At the end of the day, I will make about N20,000
gain from each N15,000 bible. I was also sustained by the cult because they
knew the importance of having me around them.
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