Category: SouthEast

  • DIG Okolo to lead police operations

    DIG Okolo to lead police operations

    The Police Service Commission (PSC) has confirmed that the Deputy Inspector-General of Police (DIG) in charge of Force Intelligence, Ben Okolo, will coordinate police operations during Saturday’s Anambra State governorship election.

    Okolo will oversee all field activities in line with the strategic directives of the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, to ensure a peaceful and credible poll.

    The PSC said the security situation across Anambra remains calm as deployment of personnel and logistics intensifies ahead of the election.

    A monitoring team led by retired DIG Taiwo Lakanu, who chairs the PSC Standing Committee on Police Matters, has arrived in Awka to supervise police performance and ensure professionalism.

    Read Also: FG will rebuild police colleges ahead Tinubu’s 30,000 personnel recruitment

    PSC spokesman Ikechukwu Ani said the deployment followed the IGP’s two-day engagement with stakeholders in the state, which has begun yielding positive results.

    He added that officers on election duty have taken control of strategic locations across Anambra, maintaining a visible security presence to reassure voters.

    Ani said the PSC delegation would monitor compliance with operational guidelines and ensure the police fulfil their constitutional mandate as the lead agency for internal security.

    To strengthen accountability, the Commission has released dedicated hotlines for residents and observers to report police misconduct or commendations during the poll.

    DIG Lakanu reiterated the Commission’s commitment to supporting the police in protecting voters, election officials, and materials, noting that credible elections can only thrive in a secure and peaceful atmosphere.

  • Ex Imo Deputy Governor, Madumere mourns father’s passing

    Ex Imo Deputy Governor, Madumere mourns father’s passing

    Former Imo State Deputy Governor, Prince Eze Madumere has lost his father, His Royal Highness, Eze Henry Anoruo Madumere, JP. 

    The late monarch from Ezi-Mbieri autonomous community in Mbaitoli local government area of Imo State, passed away at the age of 93.
    The passage was announced by the elder son of the late traditional  ruler, Prince Chijioke Madumere.

    According to him, the monarch’s reign was  characterized with fear of God, peace, wisdom, and fatherly guidance to his subjects. He urged the community to put the Madumere royal dynasty in their prayers as they pass through this period.

    The interim leadership of the community, led by President-General Emmanuel Ihentuge, along with Royal Cabinet members and the Eze In Council, announced a period of mourning across Ezi-Mbieri.

    They said that during this period, all major community activities, celebrations,  including  pending elections, and social gatherings, are suspended until after the burial rites of the late monarch.

    “The Eze-In-Council shall continue to operate in its advisory capacity, while Chief Vincent Oparaji, the Palace Secretary, has been appointed to serve as the regent of the  community. 

    “Similarly, Mrs. Ebere Nwaneri has been reappointed as Acting Women Leader, and Comrade Uche Agoha as Acting Youth Leader, both to serve until the conclusion of the burial rites”.

    In his comment, the President-General, Ihentuge highlighted that a burial committee would be constituted to plan and coordinate the funeral arrangements of the departed royal father, Eze Anoruo Madumere.

    Read Also: NIS to introduce emergency passport for Nigerians abroad

    Speaking, the former deputy Governor of Imo State, Prince Eze Madumere, described his late father as a God-fearing and compassionate personality who loved humanity deeply.

    Prince Madumere prayed for divine wisdom, strength  and courage for the royal family and the entire kingdom to bear the irreparable loss.

    The former deputy governor assured that the date for the burial ceremony of the departed monarch would be  announced in due course.

    He said, “May the soul of HRH Eze Henry Anoruo Madumere, JP, find eternal rest, in the bossom of the Lord and may his legacy of peace, humility, and service to God and mankind, continue to guide the citizens of Ezi-Mbieri  towards sustainable future”.

    Prominent community leaders and custodians of Mbieri culture who attended the official announcement include, the Chairman of the Mbieri Supreme Council of Traditional Rulers, Eze Dr. Peter Opara; Prof. Chinedu Anosike (Cona); Barr. Victor Iwuagwu;  Interim Secretary-General of Ezi-Mbieri,  Princess Ada Ngozi Madumere -Oguwuike,  Prince Henry Nnayereugo Madumere and Chief Martins Iwuajoku among others.

  • Residents of communities occupied by gunmen vow not to vote

    Residents of communities occupied by gunmen vow not to vote

    Residents of communities currently occupied by gunmen in Anambra State have vowed not to return home to cast their votes on Saturday.

    They said their decision followed the continued occupation of the surrounding bushes by hoodlums, contrary to government and security agencies’ claims that the areas had been cleared.

    The affected communities include Lilu, Isseke, Orsumoghu, and parts of Ihiala, all in Ihiala Local Government Area of the state. Others are Ukpor in Nnewi South Local Government Area, and Owerre-Ezukala and Ogbunka in Orumba South Local Government Area.

    Speaking with The Nation on Monday, a woman who sells tomatoes and onions at Eke-Awka Market said she had no plans to travel home for the election.

    “I’m from Lilu, and I will be the last person to travel home in the name of voting for anyone,” she said.

    “Where were they when my son was killed in February? Where were they when innocent people were being murdered daily by those who have taken over our bushes?

    Read Also: Suspected cultist, robber nabbed enroute attack on rival group in Anambra 

    “My once-beautiful community, which used to be our pride, has been under the control of hoodlums for over two years now. Everyone is afraid to go there and rescue it. We can’t hold any ceremonies; the place looks like a ghost town.

    “They should conduct their election and leave some of us alone to mourn our loved ones. No fewer than 50 people have been killed in my community, and many houses have been burnt. We’re not interested in their election,” the 56-year-old aggrieved woman said.

    Another resident, a civil servant from Ukpor in Nnewi South Local Government Area, who pleaded anonymity, said she would remain indoors with her children on election day.

    The 51-year-old woman told The Nation that her elder sister and niece were killed in October 2024 while returning from their farm, and the area has remained deserted since then.

    “The governor and the police keep telling us to go about our normal business, but they surround themselves with countless security personnel. Who’s deceiving whom?

    “We know all eyes will be on Anambra that day, but those boys operating in the bushes are dangerous. Nobody understands their modus operandi. Everyone is afraid of them, and no one wants to lose their life,” the Level 12 officer said.

    Meanwhile, despite a peace accord signed by candidates to discourage violence, anxiety remains high among residents across the state.

    However, the police have assured that all flashpoints and vulnerable communities will be adequately secured, with helicopters deployed during the election.

    Despite these assurances, many residents say they still fear for their safety.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has also pledged to ensure security in the troubled areas.

    The Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) in Anambra State, Dr. Queen Elizabeth Agwu, told The Nation that arrangements had been concluded with security operatives on how to manage the situation, declaring, “There’s no cause for alarm.”

  • Catholic Knights endorse Soludo’s re-election

    Catholic Knights endorse Soludo’s re-election

    Members of the Catholic Order, Knights of St. Michael the Archangel (CKSMA), have endorsed Governor Chukwuma Soludo for a second term, citing his outstanding performance in office.

    President of the Order, Sir James Ezeonu, gave the endorsement during the group’s maiden anniversary, admission, and investiture ceremony, presided over by the Catholic Bishop of Awka Diocese, Most Rev. Paulinus Ezeokafor.

    Ezeonu said the governor’s achievements were enough reason for the people of Anambra to support his re-election bid to enable him to consolidate on his developmental strides.

    “Members of this Order, having critically analyzed the work records of Mr. Governor, join the greater majority of citizens of the state in appreciating his efforts toward fulfilling his campaign manifesto of turning Anambra into a new Dubai,” he said.

    “His free education, free healthcare services, free antenatal care and child delivery, as well as the impressive network of roads and community development projects, are clear testaments to his commitment. These are enough reasons to allow him a constitutional second term to complete his set goals.”

    The CKSMA president also appealed to the governor to assist the group with a take-off grant to build its secretariat and provide an evangelical bus to enhance its outreach within and outside the state.

    Read Also: Suspected cultist, robber nabbed enroute attack on rival group in Anambra 

    Reaffirming the group’s commitment to service to God and humanity without fear or favour, Ezeonu pledged that the Knights would continue to live up to expectations and contribute meaningfully to societal development.

    In his homily, Bishop Ezeokafor commended the Knights for their dedication and assured the Church’s continued support for all groups working toward its growth and the salvation of souls.

    “What you are doing is ordained by God and practiced globally, not only in this Church. The foundation you are laying is critical to your future. The Church is fully behind you,” the Bishop said.

    “The early Church grew both spiritually and numerically through the sacrificial lives its members lived. You must do likewise by living worthy lives so that your group can attract others and have maximum impact,” he added.

  • Onoh alleges silence, betrayal of Tinubu over US designation crisis

    Onoh alleges silence, betrayal of Tinubu over US designation crisis

    The former southeast spokesman to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Josef Onoh, has raised concerns over what he alleged is a united silence around President Bola Ahmed Tinubu immediately after the United States of America designated Nigeria a country of particular concern.

    He accused all the elected political office holders in the All Progressives Congress (APC) of the betrayal silence but said it is more worrisome that Tinubu’s political appointees and cabinet members are part of those maintaining silence at a critical period.

    Onoh, in a statement explained

    In the high-stakes arena of global diplomacy, where a nation’s reputation hangs by the thinnest of threads, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu finds himself isolated in a precarious ledge. 

    He said the ongoing US designation of Nigeria as a ‘Country of Particular Concern’ (CPC) for severe violations of religious freedom is a damning indictment that threatens economic sanctions, visa restrictions, and international isolation and has exposed the fragility of Tinubu’s administration like never before. 

    “As the world watches and Washington deliberates, I’m shocked that the President’s most ardent political allies have retreated into an unnerving silence. Not a single voice from the APC governors, the National Assembly members, or the cadre of presidential appointees has risen in robust defense. 

    “Yet mention Peter Obi, Atiku, Goodluck Jonathan any opposition, they will all wake up in all aggressive focus rushing to contribute something on the social media space. Clearly, the current situation has exposed they all have nothing to offer outside local political scope of opposition attacks. I alerted the president few months ago to trust only his wife, the first lady, and the reason is becoming evident. 

    “This is not mere oversight; it is a calculated abandonment, a stark revelation of the rot at the heart of Nigeria’s ruling party.”

    Onoh said that as a keen observer of Nigeria’s political theater and an unapologetic advocate for meritocracy, the current silence lays bare his alleged betrayal.

    “The APC’s machinery, once a juggernaut of unified purpose, now creaks under the weight of its own incompetence. Tinubu stands alone not because the cause is lost, but because he has been orphaned by the very cabal he empowered. 

    “Where are the governors who owe their palaces to his patronage? Where are the senators and representatives who feasted at his table? And the appointees—those placeholders in ministerial robes and agency sinecures—why do they not rally with strategies, lobbying, or even a modicum of public solidarity? 

    “And to my greatest shock, only the voices of few in the likes of Rabiu Kwankwaso, Sen. Ali Ndume were heard, they put the love of country first before politics and they are critics of this government yet their voices were heard when it was needed. 

    “The roots of this desertion trace back to a fatal miscalculation in the administration’s infancy. In the euphoric haze of victory, The President’s team prioritized loyalty over luminosity, doling out key positions not to the architects of policy or the tacticians of governance, but to political jobbers—those opportunistic fixers whose currency is allegiance, not expertise. 

    “Ministries meant for economic wizards were handed to non party loyalists with résumés as thin as their grasp of fiscal levers. Those that genuinely supported the president were abandoned. Advisory roles, critical for navigating international waters, went to sycophants skilled in flattery but adrift in the complexities of diplomacy. 

    “The National Assembly, bloated with APC majorities, became an echo chamber of standing on your mandate rather than a forge for legislative armor and today their silence out of fear of US visa revocations for them and their families if they speak boldly in your defense clearly shows majority of people surrounding you Mr. President are only standing on their own individual mandate and not yours.

    “The Governors many ensconced in their state fiefdoms, view federal tempests as distant storms, hoarding resources while offering platitudes in private.

    “Now, as the US State Department’s scrutiny intensifies—fueled by reports of escalating religious tensions, extrajudicial killings, and institutional biases—these “allies” reveal their true mettle: brittle and self-serving. There is no surge of diplomatic envoys dispatched to Capitol Hill, no flood of op-eds from APC luminaries in global outlets, no coordinated push from appointees leveraging their networks. 

    “Instead, Mr. President toils in solitary command, your mornings consumed by frantic calls to envoys and your evenings by the gnawing realization that the engine room of this government is staffed by passengers, not pilots. The actual work—crafting nuanced responses, mobilizing civil society coalitions, or even drafting a compelling counter-narrative—falls to a skeleton crew like myself and holdovers from prior regimes or overworked civil servants. The jobbers, predictably, excel at optics: photo-ops at Aso Rock, viral tweets of feigned outrage, but zero substantive output.”

    Onoh warned that the situation is no isolated fiasco but the harbinger of systemic collapse.

    “When competency is sacrificed at the altar of patronage, the bill comes due in crises like this,” he says. “Tinubu’s vision of a renewed Nigeria—bold infrastructure leaps, agricultural revolutions, and security overhauls—crumbles not under external pressure, but internal vacuum. The US designation is a mirror reflecting the administration’s soul: competent enough to win elections, but woefully unprepared to lead a nation through fire.”

    “Yet, in this valley of silence I see a clarion call for redemption. Mr. President must purge the jobber class, elevating individuals and technocrats who can turn rhetoric into results. The APC Governors and legislators owe The President more than inertia; they must step forward with actionable support—perhaps a bipartisan resolution in the Assembly, or governors-led advocacy tours in key US states. 

    Appointees should be measured not by their party badges, but by their deliverables. Only then can the echo of silence be replaced by a chorus of competence.

    “Nigeria’s story is one of resilience, not resignation. As the US deadline looms, Tinubu’s solitude need not be his sentence. It can be the spark that ignites a merit-based renaissance, proving that true allies are forged in the crucible of crisis, not the ballot box. My voice cuts through the quiet: the time for excuses is over. The work—the real work—begins now. I stood alone from the beginning with President Tinubu and I’ll Stand by him till the end of this tenure we laboured to win.”

  • PPDC provides free legal aid to 20,900 detainees

    PPDC provides free legal aid to 20,900 detainees

    The Public and Private Development Centre (PPDC) has supported indigent detainees with free legal representation and works to speed up criminal trials.

    The organisation said that it achieved this through its ongoing Reform Pre-Trial Detention Project that is helping to ensure that all Nigerians, regardless of their social status, have access to justice without financial barriers.

    The organisation added that the initiative had already provided legal aid to over 20,900 indigent detainees, resulting in several being granted bail, discharged, or convicted after delayed cases were finally heard.

    Head of Programmes for PPDC, Aniekwe Ogechukwu said this during a Justice Walk in Abuja at the weekend ahead of the Access to Justice Parley next week.

    Ogechukwu decried the loss of public trust in the judiciary.

    He said many Nigerians now believe justice can be bought, a perception he said the organisation was determined to change through its interventions.

    Ogechukwu explained that the Reform Pre-Trial Detention Project—a three-year initiative that began in 2023—operates across five states: Plateau, Nasarawa, Adamawa, Kaduna, and the Federal Capital Territory.

    “The project ensures that, no matter your background or status, you still have the right to justice. It is free, and it helps those who cannot afford legal fees,” he said.

    He revealed that through the deployment of a new case management system and virtual court hearing technology, delays caused by logistics challenges—such as lack of transport from custodial centres to courts—had been drastically reduced.

    “We can now pull up case files in four minutes, and judges can preside virtually from anywhere in the world,” he noted.

    The programme, supported by the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL), also focuses on educating citizens about their rights during arrests and trials.

    Ogechukwu stressed that the PPDC’s goal was to make justice accessible to the poor and marginalised, not just the elite.

    “Many interventions in Nigeria tend to benefit the powerful. Our aim is to take justice to the grassroots and empower citizens to speak out for themselves,” he said.

  • Ogoni indigenes in Diaspora reject oil resumption

    Ogoni indigenes in Diaspora reject oil resumption

    …say no UNEP report implementation, no re-entry
    …accuse HYPREP of commissioning lifeless projects

    Ogoni indigenes in the United States of America (USA) have criticized the Federal Government (FG) plans to resume oil production in Ogoniland.

    The group also slammed the authorities of Hydrocarbon pollution, Remediation project (HYPREP), for allegedly prioritising profits and publicity stunts over lives of Ogoni people.

    The people reportedly spoke at an emergency Ogoni stakeholders congress in Chicago in the U S A recently.

    In a outcome transmitted to the Nation in Port Harcourt Nigeria, by the President Ogoni Business Owners in America, Chief Anthony Waada, and Gbenemene Legbo, the Leaders expressed outrage that environmental devastation in area has remained untouched despite billions of naira released for the Clean-Up Programme.

    The people in the statement alleged that “lifesaving infrastructure promised to the people has instead turned into abandoned shells, rusting pipes and water systems that supply nothing but empty promises.”

    Furthermore, they claimed that “even the recently commissioned water projects in Bodo, Uegwere-Boue, Taabaa and Eteo across Gokana, Khana and Eleme LGAs are not functioning, yet HYPREP continues parading failure as success.”

    According to them, commissioning ceremonies for projects that do not work are insulting to communities still living with poisoned streams, total blackout due to lack of electricity, and zero access to functioning healthcare.

    “Our people are still drinking poison,” Waadah stressed. “Our villages remain covered in darkness with no electricity. Women give birth in agony because there are no hospitals. Yet the government claims progress by cutting ribbons on dead projects. That is not cleanup. That is deliberate cruelty.”

    The reaction may not be unconnected with President Ahmed Tinubu’s endorsement for the return of oil extraction in Ogoniland, directing the National Security Adviser, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, to collaborate with the NNPCL and selected stakeholders to finalise modalities for restarting operations.

    Tinubu also posthumously honoured four Ogoni leaders who died during the struggle for justice. Those gestures, according to the diaspora, ring hollow when the environmental and humanitarian crisis that defined the Ogoni struggle remains unaddressed.

    “They want to honour the dead while destroying what they died for,” Waadah said. “Ken Saro-Wiwa and our heroes laid down their lives for justice, not for the government to smuggle oil rigs into Ogoni soil through the backdoor.”

    He insisted that the UNEP Environmental Assessment Report remains the only legitimate roadmap to healing the land. More than a decade after its release, he said none of its critical recommendations — including access to clean water, remediation of polluted lands, functional healthcare, and livelihood support — have been meaningfully delivered.

    Life expectancy in Ogoniland hovers around 50 years, which Waadah described as “evidence of ongoing environmental genocide.”

    Waadah argued that the billions released for the cleanup could have transformed the region into a model for environmental renewal but instead have “exacerbated suffering and fattened private pockets,” he demanded a full-scale probe into HYPREP’s operations and spending, insisting that no new project should be commissioned until independent auditors verify the functionality of those already inaugurated.

    The Chicago congress resolved that oil development in Ogoniland is completely off the table until the Federal Government fully implements the UNEP Report, ensures transparency, negotiates directly with true community representatives, and complies with Local Content laws guaranteeing training and employment for Ogoni youths, adding that any oil company interested in Ogoni oil must relocate its operational headquarters to the region and demonstrate real development commitments instead of “business as usual exploitation.”

    They further assured Ogoni residents that the diaspora stands ready to defend the land through international diplomacy and legal avenues. “If oppression returns wearing a new suit, our resistance will rise wearing the armour of truth,” he declared, noting they are prepared to escalate the matter to the United Nations and African Union if necessary.

    The group however called for peace and unity among Ogonis worldwide, maintaining that non violence remains the strength of their struggle. “We are peaceful, but not passive. We are wounded, but unbroken. Ogoni oil will only flow when justice flows first.”he insisted.

  • PINL, firm gift palliatives, gadgets to military formations in Rivers, Bayelsa

    PINL, firm gift palliatives, gadgets to military formations in Rivers, Bayelsa

    No fewer than 2,000 bags containing edibles and work gadgets have been donated to selected military formations in Rivers and Bayelsa States, by the Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited (PINL), and MaCaw Energy Services Limited.

    The formations who benefited from the gifts are, the 26 Support Engineer Regiment and 29 Battalion, Bori Camp Port Harcourt; Nigerian Navy Ship, NNS Soroh and 16 Battalion Garrison in Bayelsa State.

    Addressing journalists in Port Harcourt, Rivers state capital, the Coordinator of the exercise and Project Manager for Macaw, Energy services, Udoka Anyabolu, the gesture is part of the firms’ corporate social responsibility policies.

    He said the focus of the initiative was on enhancing engagement with security agencies and community partners who contribute to the safety and stability of Nigeria’s energy infrastructure.

    Read Also: Final Trumpet Call: Nigeria bids farewell to titan of integrity, Christopher Kolade

    “The objectives are to recognise and support the ongoing efforts of security agencies protecting national energy assets; reinforce collaboration and goodwill between PINL, Macaw, and host communities and to enhance community visibility and promote sustainable engagement across operational areas.

    “The initiative is driven by a shared commitment to promoting activities around the protection and preservation of national assets, while encouraging positive behavioural shaping among locals to strengthen community support for critical energy infrastructure.”

    Reacting to the gesture, the Commander NNS Soroh, (Bayelsa), A.O Akinbanmi who spoke on behalf of the beneficiaries thanked MaCaw Energy Resources Limited and Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited (PINL) for the gifts noting that the gesture is a proof of the cordiality that exist between the government security agencies and the private security firms, which according to him results in the zero infraction recorded in the Trans Niger Pipelines (TNP), for several months now.

    Also speaking on behalf of officers and men of the 29th Battalion, Bori Camp, the Admin Officer, Captain K. Lawal, expressed the appreciation of the officers and men of the Battalion to PINL “for bringing this kind of support as a show of appreciation to the troops deployed to various pipeline infrastructure (PINL) locations.”

  • Imo bans okada riders from Owerri Municipal City

    Imo bans okada riders from Owerri Municipal City

    The Imo State Government has issued a ban on commercial bike riders, popularly known as okada, from operating within Owerri Municipal City, effective November 8, 2025.

    Special Adviser to the Governor on Monitoring and Compliance, Chinasa Nwaneri, who signed the notice, said the ban is aimed at curbing rising criminal activities posed by Okada riders to the safety and security of citizens within the municipality.

    “We have noticed the criminal activities and risk posed by the commercial bike riders (aka okada) to the safety and security of citizens, within the Owerri municipal city,” the notice reads.

    He said the state government had given a seven-day notice to all commercial bike riders, from November 1 to November 7, 2025, to cease operating within the Owerri municipal city.

    Read Also: Final Trumpet Call: Nigeria bids farewell to titan of integrity, Christopher Kolade

    He disclosed that enforcement would commence on November 8, 2025, and any okada rider caught plying the streets will have their bike confiscated and face trial by a mobile court.

    “Beginning from 8th November 2025, the state government shall commence enforcement and confiscate any commercial bike (okada) caught plying the streets of Owerri municipality, and the rider will be tried by a mobile court in accordance with the law,” the notice warned.

    The Nation recalls that the ban on commercial bike riders within Owerri Municipal City was first issued by the past administration of Dr Ikedi Ohakim.

  • When Niger Delta stood still for Pere Monbene III’s 10th anniversary

    When Niger Delta stood still for Pere Monbene III’s 10th anniversary

    OGBE-IJOH, widely described as the “pride of the mangroves”, became the centre of attention across the Niger Delta recently when His Royal Majesty, Pere Ama-Okosu Monbene III, celebrated his 10th coronation anniversary as the traditional ruler of Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Kingdom.

    The celebrations, which lasted five days from September 22 to 26, showcased the rich culture and values of the Ijaw kingdom. It drew an impressive crowd of indigenes, political leaders, traditional rulers and cultural enthusiasts from across the Niger Delta and beyond. By the time the monarch appeared in full regalia at the palace grounds in Ogbe-Ijoh Town for the grand finale, thousands had gathered to pay homage. Ewein Hall in Ogbe-Ijoh, headquarters of Warri Southwest Local Government Area, was filled with gaily dressed men and women, adding colour to the event.

    The grand finale drew friends of the kingdom, the monarch and his subjects, from far and wide. Located deep within the mangrove creeks, Ogbe-Ijoh is accessible both by land and water. The days leading up to the coronation finale saw the waterways bustling with boats ferrying guests from Warri Club, Miller Waterside, and the Main Market jetty. Others made the journey by road through Aladja, where convoys of vehicles carried indigenes and dignitaries into the town.

    For many, the effort underscored the importance of the occasion, and the reverence that Monbene III enjoyed from within and outside. The Ogbe-Ijoh Kingdom, founded centuries ago by the ancestor Ewein, has long been a cultural and political force within the Ijaw nation.

    The relocation of the council headquarters from Ogbe-Ijoh to Ogidigben in Escravos sparked a wide and wild protest that culminated in the Warri Crisis. Monbene III’s 10th anniversary became both a celebration of his reign and an affirmation of the people’s heritage and pride of the Ijaw in the area.

    The palace grounds were transformed into a carnival-like arena. Traditional drummers and trumpeters set the tone, while Ijaw cultural troupes performed dances that highlighted the community’s and the tribe’s famed waist movements, hips swaying and feet stamping in intricate rhythm of fast drums.

    Popular Ijaw musician J King Alfred thrilled the crowd with live performances of traditional highlife and Ijaw songs. Harrysong, the Nigerian pop star who traces his roots to the area, added a contemporary flair. But it was the Bayelsa State Arts and Culture Troupe stole the limelight, combining hypnotic dances with a spirited rap in the Ijaw language that electrified native Ijaw and visitors alike.

    Women adorned in patterned lace blouses, wrappers, and gele (head ties) that made fashion statements formed dancing circles, singing along in call-and-response style. They were joined by young men and children wearing crested white T-shirts and wrappers, showcasing generational continuity of Ijaw traditions. Masquerades later appeared, sparking excitement among children who pushed forward to catch a glimpse of the colourful, towering figures.

    One of the most striking features of the anniversary was the solidarity and large turnout of traditional rulers from across Delta, Bayelsa, and other Niger Delta states. More than 30 kings were in attendance, turning the event into a symbolic royal conclave. Among them were the Pere of Gbaramatu, the Ebenanaowei of Ogulagha Kingdom, the Pere of Akugbene-Mein, the Pere of Tuomo, the Pere of Isaba, the Pere of Kabowei, the Pere of Olodiama, the Pere of Iduwini, and the Pere of Oporomo. They were joined by monarchs from Urhobo and Isoko lands, including the Ovie of Uvwie, the Ovie of Oghara, the Ovie of Idjerhe, the Ovie of Ozoro, the Ovie of Okere-Urhobo, the Ovie of Ellu, the Ovie of Igbide, the Ovie of Arhavwarien, and the Odiologbo of Olomoro. Also present were the Obi of Aboh, the Obi of Atuma-Iga, the Oruarivie of Abraka, the Okobaro of Ughievwen, and others.

    Their collective presence gave the event a rare stamp of legitimacy and unity, underscoring Ogbe-Ijoh’s central place in the politics and culture of the Niger Delta.The event also attracted a wide spectrum of political leaders and business executives. Present were Dr. Dennis Otuaro, Administrator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme; Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Emomotimi Guwor; Chairman of Warri Southwest Local Government, Chief Sylvester Oromoni; Hon Jukius Pondi, member representing Burutu Federal Constituency in the National Assembly, state lawmakers; and several government functionaries.

    Read Also: Niger Delta ex-agitator Amagbein hails new service chiefs

    From the corporate sector came Chief Tunde Smooth, a respected Ijaw leader and chairman of Smuton Nigeria Limited; Chief (Engr.) Kestin Pondi, Managing Director of Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited, and Julius Berger’s General Manager, Renner Jensch, who was conferred with a chieftaincy title in recognition of his contributions to educational development in the region.

    Other indigenes and notable personalities and sons and daughters of the kingdom, included Chief Boro Opudu, Chairman of the Delta Waterways and Land Security Committee; Chief Frank Omare, Director General, Special Programmes to the Governor of Delta State; Ambassador Francis Oyimi; Chief Monday Keme; Chief Beatrice Izoukumor, the Amabenemo Ere of the kingdom; and lawyer Eric Omare. The ceremony, though, was more that the pageantry and stunning regalia and the colourful exotic Ijaw dancers, it was also an opportunity for the kingdom to demand more from the government.

    Speaking through his spokesman, Chief Favour Izuokumor, the Pere expressed gratitude to his subjects for their loyalty but also painted a sobering picture of the challenges facing the kingdom. The traditional ruler’s reign has been dogged by the unending tribal conflict with neighbouring Aladja community in Udu Local Government Area of the state.

    It was against the dark background that Izoukumor recalled that barely a year after his ascension in 2015, the renewed land dispute with Aladja disrupted peace and progress. Although relative calm has since returned, as was demonstrated by the presence of the Udu LGA Council, Chief Vincent Oyibode, he lamented that Ogbe-Ijoh remains underdeveloped despite its contributions to the state.