The underlying factor leading to a statewide series of riots was due to the disappearance and serial murders of multiple individuals in Imo state. Owerri had gained a reputation as a peaceful conservative city, with a population drawn mainly from the civil service and academia in contrast to nearby commerce and industry-oriented towns
Aba and
Onitsha. However, the early nineties saw a surge in affluent citizens displaying ostentatious wealth with lavish mansions, expensive automobiles, and extravagant parties. Most claimed to own successful businesses including Otokoto Hotel, but the actual source of their wealth remained mysterious. These
nouveau riche citizens were also notorious for using their wealth and connections with government officials and traditional rulers to constitute a menace to the lives of Owerri residents and purchase highly-coveted chieftaincy titles. The arrival of these magnates, many of whom had streets and roads named after them, coincided with armed robbery, kidnappings, and ritual killings, but most of these crimes remained unsolved. In 1995, children of prominent Owerri residents, including medical doctors Darlington Amamasi and Omaka Okoh, engineer E.C. Adiele, and Chime Nzeribe, were kidnapped by ritualist gangs who warned their parents not to contact the police. Ransom was paid to secure their release, but most hostages were never returned to their families, believed to have been used for Satanic practices, ritual murders, and
organ trade. Imo state's Commissioner of Police, David Abure, dismissed these cases, branding Nzeribe as a "rumour monger." Following the intervention of the Nigerian Police Inspector-General
Ibrahim Coomassie, the syndicate responsible for the kidnappings was nabbed, but Abure's lack of concern remained a source of worry to Owerri residents who criticised the police for symbolising corruption, mismanagement, and abuse. ==Murder of Ikechukwu Okoronkwo==