Monkeys who few weeks ago invaded the farmhouse of a senator in the North to cart away N76 million have turned their attention on a Lagos Community, Soluyi/Sosanya Community in the highbrow Gbagada bordering Ifako. This time, they are not collecting millions, but they are stealing food items at a time that many are finding it difficult to eat three square meals and chasing residents out of their homes. Although, some residents have set traps, the monkeys, we gathered have deviced means of evading the traps, even food items mixed up with poison and have asserted their authority on the community. Members of the community are appealing to Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode to save them from the rampaging monkeys.
Chairman of the community’s Landlord Association, Mr Adigun
Olaleye, said that it had become difficult for the community to curtail the
monkeys and their destructive attitude. He attributed the invasion to the
nearness of the community to a swamp forest that separated the community from
Ifako area.
According to him, the monkeys come into residences at any
time including early morning and gain entrance into rooms even if the houses
are locked. Olalaye told NAN that the community had written a letter to the
Lagos State Ministry of Agriculture as regards the situation but had yet to get
a relief.
“They said we would have to pay for them to come and pack
the monkeys,” he said.
He said that the invasion had been on for years but recently
became unbearable. Olaleye appealed to the state government to urgently
intervene. Narrating her ordeal, a journalist who lives in the community, Mrs
Funmilola Gboteku, told NAN that the monkeys had forced her family to flee.
“Many times, these monkeys come to the neighbourhood to
destroy our property. Once they see food items inside a house, they direct all
their energies at gaining entrance forcefully. The monkeys are in the habit of
tearing the protective nets on windows to gain entrance and eat whatever they
find in the house.
“I have had to replace the protective nets several times; I
am tired of doing it. I have been locking my windows but locking of windows has
disadvantages; there is no cross ventilation in the house, and as a result, we
suffer heat,” she told NAN.
Another resident, Mr Gabriel Omopariwa, said that he was
tired of the destructive attitude of the monkeys and had tried to look for ways
to stop them, to no avail.
“On several occasions, these monkeys have destroyed our
kitchen nets to gain entrance and steal food items. Several traps have been set
to capture and kill these demonic animals to no avail.
“One of my neighbours, while trying to pour chemical on a
monkey, fell in the bowl of the chemical; she had to be rushed to a hospital.
She still lives with the scars from the unfortunate incident,” he said. Mr
Joshua Folowosele, a landlord, said that the monkeys entered his wife’s shop on
many occasions to eat gala, biscuits and other foods.
“We have tried to poison them on many occasions, but those
monkeys are too smart; once they perceive the smell of the food, they usually
detect it has been poisoned. Some of them have been killed with guns, but we
cannot keep shooting in a residential area; it is very risky.
“Those of us who are landlords can testify that these
monkeys have been disturbing us for years. One of the landlords here had to
sell his house to move to another place when he got tired of the disturbance,”
Folowosele said. Another landlord, Mr Oluwatosin Aregbesola, told NAN that his
tenants were no longer feeling safe in the house because of the monkeys.
“The monkeys enter kitchens to eat our soups and any
foodstuff on the shelf. The day I tried to catch one of them, the monkey
attacked me by using its long nails to punch a hole on my neck and scratch my
face,” he said.
Aregbesola appealed to the state government to save the
community from the menace.
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