Nigerian police arrest 15 after viral videos of alleged sexual assault at festival
Nigerian police have arrested 15 people following viral videos showing alleged sexual assault of women at the Alue-Do festival in Ozoro, Delta State. The videos depict young men chasing, stripping, grabbing, and assaulting women in public, sparking outrage and calls for accountability regarding gender-based violence.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedNigerian police have arrested 15 people following viral videos showing alleged sexual assault of women at the Alue-Do festival in Ozoro, Delta State. The videos depict young men chasing, stripping, grabbing, and assaulting women in public, sparking outrage and calls for accountability regarding gender-based violence. Police have condemned the acts as "alarming, disgusting and embarrassing" and are investigating the incidents, including claims that the violence was organized or tolerated under the guise of tradition. While police report that the women involved deny rape occurred, rights groups emphasize that the documented acts constitute serious gender-based violence under Nigerian law. Both the King of Ozoro and the Delta State government deny that the festival condones sexual assault, attributing the violence to misinterpretation and abuse by youths, and affirming that such acts are criminal.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe King of Ozoro has rejected suggestions that the Alue-Do festival condones sexual assault.
"We have spoken to four girls and all of them said nobody raped them."
Delta state police have rejected claims circulating online that the Alue-Do festival in Ozoro was a "rape festival".
Videos circulated online showing young men openly attacking women who were on their own.
15 people have been arrested following allegations of sexual assault at a community festival in the southern Delta state.