Update is that the burial of Senator Isiaka Adeleke, which was earlier scheduled for 4 p.m. on Sunday, has been postponed.
Adeleke, a former civilian governor of Osun, died in the earlier hours of Sunday at Biket Hospital in Osogbo.
The corpse, which was brought to his residence in Ede at about 1 p.m. in preparation for the Islamic burial rites, was returned to Ladoke Akintola Hospital in Osogbo for autopsy.
It was gathered that the younger brother of the late politician, Deji, had ordered for autopsy to be carried out to ascertain the cause of death.
Deji was also said to have directed that the burial ceremony be postponed till Monday.
Friends and sympathisers, who were waiting for the burial ceremony, were told around 5 p.m. that the event had been postponed.
A family source said the burial had been fixed for 10 a.m. on Monday, pending the outcome of the autopsy.
Giving a picture of the developments leading to the demise of the late flamboyant politician, one of the domestic staff told NAN that Adeleke had attended a meeting till around 2 a.m. on Sunday before he went to bed.
The staff, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Adeleke also attended burial and wedding ceremonies in Guta and Iwo on Saturday.
The source further explained that early in the morning on Sunday, Adeleke complained of leg pain and his private doctor was called in to attend to him.
According to the staff, the doctor gave him an injection and he left, only to be called back after the Senator complained of stomach ache.
“He was later rushed to Biket Hospital where he was finally confirmed dead,’’ the source said.
The news of the death had resulted in violent protests by youths in Ede, with many of them barricading the ever busy Osogbo-Ibadan road and setting bonfires which disrupted the free flow of traffic.
It took the combined efforts of security agents to disperse the irate youths.
The Police Commissioner in the state, Mr Fimihan Adeoye, who said normalcy had been restored in the area, urged the youths to refrain from violence
As at the time of filing this report, two armoured personnel carriers were stationed at the road leading to Adeleke’s house in Ede, while one was stationed directly opposite his residence.