ISAN EKITI — The smoke had not yet cleared when neighbors began pulling buckets of water toward the burning police station. Inside, officers scrambled to save files and equipment. Outside, a crowd that had gathered just hours earlier to vote now stood watching flames climb the station roof.
The fire broke out after a police officer allegedly shot and killed a teenage boy near a polling unit on election day, residents said. What began as a single shot turned into a community in mourning, then a community in rage.
A Family Waits for Answers
The boy’s mother, who asked to be identified only as Mama Tayo, said her son had gone out that morning to watch the voting process with friends. “He was just curious about the election. He was not a troublemaker,” she said, her voice breaking as neighbors stood around her compound.
She said she last saw him leave home shortly after breakfast. By midday, neighbors were knocking on her door with news she did not expect to hear. “They told me to come quickly. I did not understand what they meant until I got there,” she said.
Community members say the shooting happened during a confrontation near the polling unit, though accounts of what triggered it still vary. Some residents said the officer fired a warning shot that struck the boy by accident. Others said the circumstances remain unclear.
Anger Turns Into Fire
Within hours, anger over the boy’s death spread through Isan Ekiti. A crowd gathered outside the local police station, and the building was set ablaze before officers could fully contain the situation. Two police officers were injured during the unrest, according to security sources.
A community elder, who gave his name as Pa Bayo, said the anger came from years of frustration, not just this single incident. “Our people have cried about how they are treated for a long time. This boy’s death broke something that was already cracked,” he said.
Police say they have opened an investigation into the shooting and the unrest that followed. A police spokesperson, speaking on condition that only the command be named, said officers were working to restore calm and identify those responsible for the fire.
A Community Mourns and Demands Answers
Residents have called for an independent inquiry into the shooting, saying they do not trust an internal police review alone. Many fear the case could go the way of past incidents that ended without clear accountability.
For Mama Tayo, the political outcome of the election that drew her son outside that morning no longer matters. “I do not care who wins. I only want to know why my son is not coming home,” she said.
As evening fell over Isan Ekiti, the burned station stood as a visible reminder of the day’s events. Children who had watched their parents vote that morning instead watched smoke rise over their town by nightfall.
A Town Caught Between Grief and Suspicion
Local shop owners said business came to a standstill for the rest of the day as residents stayed close to home, uncertain whether further unrest might follow. A trader near the polling unit said she shut her stall the moment she heard gunshots. “I grabbed my goods and ran. I did not wait to ask questions,” she said.
Youth leaders in the community have called for calm while also demanding that the officer involved face appropriate consequences. One youth leader, who identified himself only as Comrade Femi, said residents would continue to watch how the case unfolds. “We are not asking for chaos. We are asking for truth and justice,” he said.
Election observers present in the area at the time said the incident cast a shadow over what had otherwise been a peaceful voting process across most of Ekiti State. They noted that such incidents, even isolated ones, can shape public trust in security agencies for years afterward.
Authorities have promised updates as the investigation continues. For now, the family waits, the community grieves, and the station that once stood at the center of local security lies charred and empty.
Mama Tayo said she hopes her son’s death leads to lasting change, even if it cannot bring him back. “If something good can come from this pain, then maybe his death will not be for nothing,” she said, surrounded by relatives who had come to sit with her through the night.
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