Tag: KINGDOM

  • Make our kids Pro footballers get N35.1million/Annum

     

    At a time when many are complaining about unemployment, at a time when those who are employed in some countries are lamenting about the inadequacy of the pay packet, a wealthy couple in the United kingdom have put a job on the table that could fetch whoever eventually gets it, a take home of £75,000 per year (about N35.1million or N2.9million per month)

    The unnamed wealthy couple whose sons dream of becoming professional footballers have offered to pay the person who can take them to the top £75,000 per year in an unconventional job role.

    The chosen manager-come-nanny will need to have played at a high level and have coaching experience, according to the job advertisement posted online.

    The frank description explained how the couple ‘in their 40s’ from Barnet in London are wealthy but do not like their ‘boring corporate jobs’ and want their sons to ‘make it’ in sport.

    After getting the job the well paid coach will be expected to run intensive camps with the boys and attend games on Sundays.

    The ad states: ‘Being stuck doing something you dislike is a position we don’t want our children to ever be in, and we’re willing to do pretty much anything to make sure our sons are able to follow their dreams.

    ‘The reason we’re so passionate about this is that when my husband was younger football was something he wanted to pursue, but he was pushed down a more academic route by his parents.

    ‘This is something we never want to do to our boys.

    ‘They’re both incredibly talented and easily the best in their teams, even at 8 and 10 years old.

    ‘Obviously we know our requirements are unconventional, and a nanny with experience and contacts in professional football is like asking for a unicorn, but we can pay a £75,000 annual salary for the right candidate.’

    The family from Barnet in London wants someone who can start ‘ASAP’.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Animal kingdom

    Denizens of our animal kingdom are of diverse kinds. There are those who suckle in the main on patronage pleasures of powers that be, and now they are thoroughly disconcerted over the fluidity of things. The lion king has been away for some while and it is up in the air when he would be back. And prolonged absence has a way of weakening allegiance in the quicksand of opportunism – didn’t ancient wisdom teach that out of sight was out of mind? Thus they have faltered in the rites of passage at the power Rock. Now they cast anxious glances on the horizon for portents of a vengeful roar by the lion king, who was recently touted to contemplate a lashback from his long hibernation.

    You could see through some other denizens in the palace courts groping for which altar is secure to worship at: the altar of defiant loyalty to the absent lion king and outright insouciance to proxy authority, or the altar of concessional allegiance to surrogate power – even if only for this intermission that the lion king is away on hibernation. After all, the lioness lately growled a blatant warning that jackals and hyenas in the kingdom should prepare to be sent packing when the lion king shortly returns. She was construed to be alluding to freebooters angling for vantage foothold in the flurry of intrigues surrounding the throne, amidst lingering uncertainty occasioned by the long absence of the lion king.

    But there also denizens far removed from the palace courts, who are simply but thoroughly distressed by the persisting pendency relentlessly imploding our coerced commonwealth at its feeble joints. This pendency, by the day, increasingly attenuates the obliged mutual toleration by co-habitants of the kingdom, which now is erupting into freewheeling hate discourse threatening our collective wellbeing.

    The metaphors adapted here were lately served up from the palace courts as the new parlance of our national conversation. We had thought the hotheaded separatist obsessively pursuing the once lost cause of Biafra secession (Nnamdi Kanu) badly fouled up the air when he labelled Nigeria a cannibal zoo. We felt his imagery was way too toxic, and in league with the horrific experience of 1994 Rwandan genocide where majority Hutus were incited to a last push against minority Tutsis who were at the time labelled ‘cockroaches.’ Now we may just as well eat the humble pie and admit our indignation at Kanu was presumptuous. Because in the last few days, we have had the ‘distinguished’ imprimatur of a senator of the Federal Republic to see rabid jackals and hyenas inhabiting this domain of the lion king. And for good measure, we have had the royal seal of the irrepressible lioness of the kingdom to ratchet up threats against those hyenas and jackals in anticipation of touted imminent return of the lion king. Welcome to our animal kingdom!

    This is one kingdom where hate speech thrives even in the hallowed corridors of power, never mind that there is a subsisting national advocacy to rein it in for the safety of our commonwealth. And it is moot that the nihilistic streak involved is a universal tendency. Forget now their United States of today under the Donald Trump presidency, there was a time in that country when it seemed that graceful speech in the face of hate speech was one of the lofty attributes of civilised conduct of power. Recall, for instance, that amidst the diatribes which attended the country’s 2016 presidential electioneering, former First Lady Michelle Obama, while on the hustings for Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, famously canvassed the ethic: ‘When they go low, we go high.’ You could well say the unstated ethic of national conversation in our own kingdom is: ‘When they go low, we plunge to the nadir!’

    To be sure, ours is an animal kingdom, not even an ‘animal farm’ as in the republican allegory of events leading up to the 1917 Russian Revolution and the despotism that followed, which you would find in the all-time classic, Animal Farm, authored by English novelist and critic, George Orwell. Unlike in Orwell’s animal farm where there was a semblance of communal sovereignty, at least until the hegemony of Napoleon crystalised, what we have with us is a kingdom. And like in any typical kingdom, it is the lion king and his power clan of strongmen who hold utter sway over effectively powerless subjects.

    Of course, you may have thought, like some of us who have our noses up in the clouds, that this is an electoral democracy, and hence that sovereignty flows from the people who elect the power clan to office to serve them. And you were right, but apparently only theoretically so, going by the recent metaphoric admonitions of the senator and the lioness of the kingdom. The effect of those metaphors is to nudge us to the reality of where sovereignty in the animal kingdom truly lies.

    Let’s here call off this sardonic game of stretching the animal kingdom metaphor and cut to the cheese: hate speech abounds in the Nigerian polity – but more distressingly so in recent weeks, even at the highest stratum of power. That development made paltry the plague among ordinary citizens over which there has been an outcry hitherto.

    Senator Shehu Sani (Kaduna Central) obviously exercised his literary gifts and right to free speech when he made the July 6 post on his Facebook page about the absent lion king and the scheming by hyenas and jackals in the kingdom owing to that absence. And so did First Lady Aisha Buhari in her rejoinder post on July 10 where she said the hyenas and the jackals would shortly be sent out of the kingdom, as God answered the prayers of the weaker animals. But it should be obvious as well that both personages trafficked in hate speech to the extreme. The imageries used explicitly wedged Nigerians into hostile camps; and the message by First Lady Aisha, in particular, injected more venom rather than relieve the tone of national conversation that had been heavily weighted with negativity in recent weeks. And by the way, was it coincidence or consequence that Acting President Yemi Osinbajo scurried off for an unscheduled visit to President Muhammadu Buhari in London on the heels of the First Lady’s post?

    It is trite that, ideally, the privilege of power must come with the consciousness of responsibility for role modeling. Our leaders need to bear this in my in every conversation.

  • Imo community where pregnant girls are BANISHED for life

    Imo community where pregnant girls are BANISHED for life

    Maidens must walk to the market with bare breasts for initiation into womanhood

    Young female indigenes protest practice, say it’s initiation into marine kingdom

    Osu (caste system) is an ancient Igbo traditional practice that is well known within and outside the country but often condemned because of its perceived infringement on the fundamental rights of the affected people. But not many people are aware of Ikwe-ezi, a traditional festival in Mgbidi area of Imo State, which requires young girls to maintain a high level of morality before they perform the rites which are compulsory for every female indigene of the area. From the stone-age when the practice began till date, hordes of young girls who failed to keep to the rules of the tradition were said to have been publicly humiliated and banished from the community. INNOCENT DURU reports.

     

    THIS, obviously, is a season of celebration and anxiety for many families in Mgbidi, the headquarters of Oru Local Government Area, Imo State. It is a joyous moment for the entire community because it is the period when the people celebrate the Ikwe-ezi, a ceremony that is akin to what is commonly known as rite of passage. It is a huge celebration that draws indigenes of the community in other parts of the country and beyond home to take part, just the way many Igbo people travel home during the Yuletide season.

    The Ikwe-ezi is, however, a period of anxiety for many families whose daughters are ripe for the ceremony, because they have seen and heard of how many families in the land have had their daughters publicly embarrassed and even banished from the community for not being faithful to the rules of the tradition. The Nation gathered that the thought of the grave consequence sends shivers down the spines of parents whose daughters are old enough to take part in the ceremony.

    The Principal Palace Secretary to the traditional ruler, Chief Festus Orji Achonu, who spoke with our correspondent, said: “When a girl has attained maturity but has not performed the rites, her parents must guard her jealously to prevent her from becoming pregnant. If she becomes pregnant before performing the rites, she will be banished from Mgbidi and certain cleansing rites will be done for the family she comes from. The banished girl will never step into the community again. If for any reason she enters the community, the male children in the family will have to perform some cleansing rites in order not to attract the wrath of the gods of the land.”

    Some other respondents said the girl in question risks being lynched if she steps into the community after she has been banished.

    “When a girl has been banished from the community, on no account must she return. She can pass through the land in a vehicle, but she must not step on the soil. If she attempts it, she will be lynched and the family will pay dearly for it,“ a respondent said.

    Giving background information about the ceremony, Chief Achonu said: “Ikwe-ezi is a unique culture in Mgbidi which has not been affected by civilisation or Christianity. A young girl must have reached maturity age to qualify for participation. If you have not reached the age, you are not qualified to do it. It is a sort of check and balance on our young girls. It begins from January and ends in June annually.

    “The practice started from time immemorial with the daughter of a peasant. She was so beautiful that people became jealous of her. She eventually became pregnant, making the elders to gather and declare the development as a taboo. They consequently said she should be banished from the town. The helpless, poor father cried and swore that nothing would ever put an end to the practice in the land. That is why nothing has been able to stop this since then.

    “Every girl that performs the tradition will go to a river we call Nmiri nwata oma (water of a beautiful child) with a small yam that is thrown inside the shrine of the goddess of the river called Obana. That is the tradition we got from our forefathers. When she does this, it means she has done the Ikwe-ezi ceremony, and that signifies that she is now pure.

    “Every girl going through the rites makes use of large quantities of coconut and fish which she distributes to the guests that come to celebrate with her. There are two nights that they will come and perform the ceremony. The first is done on the Orie market day called Ikpoba ali udu ego. The second ceremony is done on Eke market day and it is called ibu oyo. On these two days, a coconut and a fish is given by the celebrant to as many people as come to congratulate her. In appreciation, you can give her money.

    “The Ikwe-ezi ceremony starts after a ceremony we call Chioha here in Mgbidi. Every parent whose daughter is ready will fire two gunshots on Eke day to inform the entire community that their child is ready for the ceremony. On the second day, which is Orie, they will perform the ikpoba ali udu ego. They will come to congratulate the family and take part in the ceremony.

    “There would be traditional folk music for the celebrant to dance to on these two days. On those days, the celebrant gets a lot of gifts. The ceremony lasts for two weeks during which she will not do anything. For a period of time, the celebrant will be in a hut grinding local chalk that she would rub on her body. During this period, they would be cooking delicious meals for her to eat.

    “On the final day, she would go to Eke Mgbidi Market to do izu ahia ezi, tying only wrapper and leaving their breasts open to go to the market. They will go round the market and people will see her that she did it without any blemish. If she is pregnant before entering the fat room, on the day she goes to the market with her breasts open, some old women will notice it and drive her out of the market. She would then be banished from the community.”

     

    Concerned parents

    The fear of falling victim of the unpleasant picture painted by Chief Achonu and other respondents was apparent when our correspondent visited the community. A mother, who gave her name simply as Elizabeth, said she had been seriously troubled since last year when her daughter started seeing her menstrual period. She said she had to keep a close watch on her to prevent her from getting into sexual relationships that could lead to pregnancy.

    Elizabeth said: “I have never kept a close watch on my daughter the way I have been doing since she started seeing her menstrual cycle late last year. I developed goose pimples the very day she told me that she had seen her period. Frightened, I exclaimed, ‘isi gini’ (what did you just say)? Have you been seeing any man?

    “Confused, she said, ‘Mummy, what do you mean? I see men everywhere.’

    “Mba (no)! I mean has any man ever touched you?

    “She looked more confused and said yes. Many males touch me now.

    “At that point, I said you seem not to understand. Has any man made love to you before?

    “She looked astounded as I bombarded her with unusual questions that thoroughly embarrassed the young girl.

    “I have never stopped asking the same question every day, no matter how embarrassed she feels. I will not rest until she has performed the ceremony and come out clean. The devil is always bringing temptations to the girls when they are approaching the time, just to humiliate them and their families. I pray that, that will never be my portion. During our time, there was no need for such because you could be naked and no man would touch you. But now, a baby that wears diaper is not spared by sexual perverts.”

    If Elizabeth was worried because of her only girl, Ada has more reasons to be worried as a good number of her children are females.

    She said: “I constantly suffer serious headache policing my daughters so that they don’t have anything to do with men, especially before they perform the ceremony. As a parent, I cherish and preach morality to my children. But the Ikwe-ezi ceremony requires one to be more than just a morality preacher.

    “I follow my daughters, especially the matured ones, bumper to bumper, because any slight mistake may lead to a lifetime regret. If I see any male around them, you will see me barking like a mad dog. If they go to school and have not returned at the time they are supposed to, my heart will be up.

    “At times, I kneel to beg my daughters to keep themselves pure. I would take time to narrate the consequence of not doing so and ask them if they would want to be banished to an unknown place where they would not see me again. It is tasking, especially for mothers, because if anything goes wrong, it is the women that would be at the receiving end.”

    Equally worried is Nneamaka, who is greatly haunted by stories of girls that have been banished. The fair-complexioned woman said apart from hearing that people were banished, she had seen it happen. The experience, according to her, reverberates in her memory, especially now that one of her daughters is getting ready to perform the rite.

    She said: “I enjoyed the ceremony before now and had no reason to be scared because I hadn’t any child old enough to take part in it. I am feeling the heat now that my child is ready for it. I am tensed up because I don’t want any unpalatable story. It could be entertaining to watch another woman’s child banished, but one would never pray to be a victim.

    “I know of a woman whose child was banished, and I can tell you that her life has never been the same since then. I don’t want to experience that, and that is why I would not sleep or slumber until my daughter has scaled the hurdle.

    “The shame and stigmatisation that come with one’s daughter being banished is too much. When a girl goes to the market half naked, some old women will conduct a check on her to see if she has violated the rules. If she has, they will make her sit down and paint her with charcoal. After that, she will be banished. As they are sending her out of the town, some people will be flogging her, others will be spitting on her, while some others will use brooms to sweep her feet away as she leaves. Immediately they drive her out, you will see men from other communities coming to take her as a wife without paying any bride price to the family.

    “There are so many of them in places like Izombe, Otulu and and neighbouring communities. When a young girl is taken away like that, anything can happen to her. She can be maltreated, used for rituals or any other terrible thing. I will not live for another 24 hours if such fate befalls my daughter. That is why I am doing everything possible to monitor them.”

     

    Young girls kick

    Some young girls who spoke with our correspondent expressed reservations with the practice, which they said is a subtle way of initiating them into occultism.

    One of them, who identified herself simply as Amarachi, said: “I have not done it because it is against my religious belief. I don’t need to do the ceremony to live a chaste life. What is my connection with the lady from which the problem began and why would I have to go to the river to dip my leg into the water and also drop yam and fowl in the shrine? It is nothing but an initiation and I will never take part in it.”

    For Onyinye, the practice has outlived its usefulness. She said: “Of what relevance is the ceremony in the modern time? I wonder why our people are holding on to the practice when many other communities have long jettisoned such primitive practices.

    “Some of my friends and I have vowed that we would not take part in it. There are some men of God that are also kicking against it. They have been organising prayers for young girls like us to break the curses and other evils attached to performing or not performing the ceremony. We say no to barbaric traditional practices that humiliate the female folk. All you have are cultural practices about females. Why are there none for males?”

     

    Different strokes for different folks

    It was, however, a different story with some people who had undergone the rite. Some of them said they actually relished the occasion and wish they could do it all over.

    Franca Ekwueme, who was filled with joy when our correspondent asked her about the practice, said: “This is a big festival here in Mgbidi. It is done in the Christmas period. I did mine and I was very happy about it. I feel like doing it again because it is a thing of pride.

    “It is always fun because many people will come and celebrate with you. When you are in the hut grinding the local chalk that you rub on your body, your skin will be glowing and you will come out looking robust. If you do it without any blemish, your parents are proud of you for not bringing them shame.

    “If you don’t perform the ceremony, nobody will marry you because you will be seen as a cursed person. Many people have been banished for not keeping to the rules of the rites.

    “When going to the river, you will go with a yam and a fowl. When you get to the river, you will put your toes in the river. There are some changes that will happen to the river if you are not pure. After dipping your toes in the river, you will take the fowl and fling it across your neck three times and throw the yam at a designated place.”

    Franca also shared the shocking fate that befell a girl who performed the rites while she was pregnant. She said: “There are grave consequences for those that succeed in doing it while they are pregnant. I know of somebody who succeeded in doing it while she was pregnant. But when she later got married, the husband developed mental challenges. She later remarried and stayed for a very long time before she got pregnant again.

    “When it was time for her to give birth, it was a bunch of hair attachment that came out of her instead of a baby. She died and later on, the husband died too.

    “It is better for one to keep herself pure and honourably observe the rites instead of trying to be smart and ending up in shame and lifetime regrets. The tradition is not treated with levity by our people. Even if you are resident in other states or outside the country, when the time comes, you must come and do it. Once the time to do it is announced, you will see many parents rushing back home with their qualified daughters from different parts of the country and beyond to observe the rites. Once a girl is banished, she would not be allowed to come back to the community again.”

    Another lover of the practice, Ngozi Emmanuel, says she wants her children to observe it without leaving out any aspect.

    She said: “I did full Ikwe-ezi and I will gladly want my children to do same. I enjoyed it so much because it was one moment in my life that people celebrated with me. There was no reason for me to be shy for leaving my breasts open. It was a thing of pride to show that you are pure and that your breasts are standing firmly.

    “When you are walking from your house to the market, your breasts will be bouncing in confirmation of your purity. I wish I could do it all over again. The distance you will trek could be far or short. It all depends on the distance from your house to the market. It is always fun.”

    Ngozi noted that there had always been attempts by Christians to put an end to the practice but the efforts always failed.

    “There was a time a Catholic priest tried to abolish it, but before you know it, many people started dying or having mental challenges. It later became a legal issue because the custodians of the tradition didn’t want it abolished. The priest eventually left the community,” she recalled.

     

    For the men, a piece of entertainment

    It is, however, not only the females that enjoy the ceremony. Chats with some males showed that it serves as a piece of entertainment for them too.

    One of the men who gave his name as Uzoma said: “We eagerly look forward to the ceremony. It entertains us very well as it gives you the opportunity of seeing maidens in their natural state. Apart from that, it gives us the opportunity of eating free coconut and fish provided by the celebrants. We don’t joke with the ceremony here. There was a pastor that vowed that he would not do it for his children. But the mother who knows the implication secretly did it for them.”

    Enumerating the benefits of the ceremony to the community, Chief Achonu said the elders had modified the ceremony to some extent.

    According to him: “The benefit is that it is a sort of checks and balances for our young girls. Anyone that has not performed it must be very careful to avoid the grave consequences. Nobody will like herself or her family members to be sent out of the community. That is why they need to be very careful so that such a nasty story does not come up. Many people have been banished.

    “The modification we have done is that they don’t go to the market anymore leaving their breasts open.  Some people don’t even go to the market again. The ceremony can even be performed now by proxy, especially for those who are abroad, as long as the person is pure.

    “Those who fail the test are forever banished and will never step into the community again. If for any reason she enters the community, the male members of the family will be affected. They will have to perform the cleansing again to be free from attracting the wrath of the gods of the land.”

    His assertion was, however, denied by some of the community members who claimed that some groups still go to the market with their breasts totally open.

    “It is not true that no one goes half naked to the market anymore. Some groups, especially those who are devotees of the water goddess, still do it. There was a family that did that recently and we all saw it,” a community member said.

     

    Knocks for practice

    The practice, like the Osu (caste system), has also attracted severe condemnation from religious leaders and gender activists. In a chat with our correspondent, the General Overseer of Living Souls Pentecostal Ministry, in Mgbidi, Bishop Paul Chukwu, said he does not support the Ikwe -ezi ceremony because “it causes the girls to be messed up.”

    The cleric, who did not hide his disdain for the practice, said: “They are always asked to go to the river to place their legs there and perform some rituals. They will strip themselves naked along the road and do all sorts of things in the public glare. After the whole exercise, the young girls would be told to go and have the freedom to fornicate. It is hard to bring the indigenes of this place into Pentecostal churches.

    “I have been speaking to the custodians of the tradition on the need to abolish it, but they are tightly holding on to it. At times, when you mention it to them, they will be harassing you. When you dare say anything that is against the practice, they will tell you it is a no-go area.”

    He dismissed the claims that the ceremony attracts a lot of benefits to the community, saying: “Forget their argument that the practice is aimed at making the girls to keep their virginity. We are here seeing everything that is happening. All the people that have gone through the ritual that I know of become promiscuous after doing it. Look around and you will see that this particular city is filled with touts and prostitutes even in residential buildings.

    “The name of the community is one of its undoing. Mgbidi means barrier, and everywhere you go and say that you are from Mgbidi, the next thing people will do is to scream. I have seen many girls that were banished because they became pregnant before going through the ritual. It is an abomination for anybody to banish fellow human beings. Did God ask us to kill or destroy another person? There are many things that I have seen here that are reprehensible.”

    On her part, the Executive Director of Project Alert, a non-governmental organisation based in Lagos, Dr Josephine Effah Chukwuma, said: “It is a discriminatory practice and very much out of line with the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. It is discriminatory because they do not banish the boys/men who impregnate them. Did the young girls get pregnant on their own? Why do we keep holding on to cultural practices that are harmful and discriminatory to women and girls?

    In her remark, the Executive Director, Centre for Children’s Health Education, Orientation and Protection (CEE-HOPE), Betty Abah, said: “My view of it is that this is a cultural thing and cultures, traditions and norms should have a place in our society. That is what gives colour, candour and character to a society or a micro-society in this instance. We can’t throw the baby away with the bath water.

    “I suspect that this is a sort of rite of passage or coming of age ceremony, which applies in many indigenous societies with the various rites and ceremonies. What we should examine is the crude aspect of it so as to do away with it. And typically, as I can glean from this, the odds are against the womenfolk. First, does she really have to go half-naked in this age? To prove what point exactly?

    “Again, very importantly, what are the methods of ascertaining whether she is pregnant or not? Are those methods medically ethical or healthy? Are they done by a medical professional or a crude method that may pose the risk of infection or contamination all in the name of sustaining a tradition?

    “Ultimately, I would like to ask the elders, the custodians of this age-long tradition a quiet question: why should the girl be the only one to be banished? Does it no longer take two to tangle or did she somehow impregnate herself? What happens to her partner in crime? Leave him to continue impregnating more girls and then getting those girls banished?

    “While I do not condone extra-marital sex, I believe it will be great if both are punished. It can only be fair that way. Generally, I think the practice should be scrutinised and ‘polished’ in light of modern realities.”

    Taking a legal look at the practice, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief Ladi Williams, said the idea of banishing defaulters is out of place.

    He said: “Freedom of movement in any part of the country is a constitutional right which cannot be abrogated. The community has no right to do that. Any customary law that says that they have such powers to the extent that it is consistent with the constitution is null and void. If a customary court supports that, then it is nonsense.

    “The affected persons should proceed to the magistrate court. Such case can even go on up to the Supreme Court. The banished persons can sue for enforcement of human rights and also claim damages for preventing them from going to her primary place of abode.”

  • Ijaw kingdom gets monarch

    Ijaw kingdom gets monarch

    The people of Tubutoru Kingdom in Odigbo Local Government Area of Ondo State are still in expansive mood over the installation of their monarch,   His Royal Majesty, Pere Gbebokedi Ajiri-Oba, the Oguruyeke, Okirimini 1 of Tubutoru Kingdom.

    The four-day ceremony was full of glamour and grandeur. It was hugely attended by political bigwigs, individuals and envoys from different kingdoms in the Ijaw dynasty.

    The monarch thanked God for making him the first King of the Kingdom.

    He told his subjects to see his emergence as the beginning of good things to come , stressing that his Kingdom over the years had suffered deprivation.

    Okirimini said his ultimate desire was to see a united Kingdom. He urged members of his dynasty to have respect for one another because moving forward as a Kingdom was dependent on such harmonious alignment

    The monarch pledged to work with other Ijaw Kingdoms in the Niger Delta to bring lasting peace for the much needed development in the region.

    He implored his people to be happy as the dark and gloomy days were over.

    High Chief Gaius Wariugo, a retired civil servant and a leader of thought in Tubutoru Kingdom, described the ceremony as historic,  adding that it would  usher in development that had eluded them in many years.

    Wariugo said: “I will say that the ceremony is very fantastic, because this has never happened in this kingdom before. I was born more than sixty years ago and I’ve not experienced this before, not even my fathers, because they never told me about such. This is the first remarkable thing that is happening in this kingdom. I give kudos to everyone that contributed to the success of this event.

    “This will facilitate development because even the Nigeria constitution has a place for traditional rulers. The traditional stool in Tubutoru kingdom, which we’ve not gotten before will no doubt bring  development, including infrastructural development, because we know that we now have a King that will draw the government’s attention for the betterment of the entire Tubutoru kingdom.

    “There have been an age long festival we do annually and we call it Koleke festival. We all embrace it when it comes. It lasts almost three days. It is mainly for cleansing. If things are not working fine and we do the festival, things will definitely work well and we have over 20 different communities that make up this Kingdom.”

    Chief Joseph Uduboh, the Tunteriwei of Tubutoru kingdom and double Chief Julius Ogoba, the Miekeremowei of the Kingdom, expressed confidence on the capacity of the new King, adding that the birth of the Kingdom would resuscitate among others the St. Timothy Primary School in Taribo, the traditional headquarters of the Kingdom  founded by the Christ Missionary Society, CMS in 1945.

    The Councilor and Chief whip in Odigbo Local Government legislative chamber representing Ebijoh Ward 6, Hon.(Chief) Ayebi Oteigha, who hails from the Kingdom, said:  “Politically speaking, as a people, we are facing lots of tough time, nevertheless, I think with the golden opportunity given to me to represent the good people of Tubutoru as Ebijoh ward, I believe with our good relationship with the chairman and our contact with the state government, I know we will get lots of developmental strides, within a short period of time. Before you can build a political arena, the people must have permanent voter’s card (PVC), they must be registered properly, the people must be inculcated into the political system. When the people are inculcated and vibrant people are there, I think the government must respond to them. We always orient the people, we have a seminar within the Local Government were we can be orienting them.”

    A leader in Gbaramatu Kingdom, Azaiye Piniki, urged the people of Tubutoru, said: “What is happening here today is something that will open this place, it ought to have happened long before now, even though its happening now, we still have to thank God. Gbaramatu as a Kingdom is closely related to Tubutoru; right from the days of old, we intermarried, most people from Gbaramatu have blood ties to this Kingdom,” Azaiye said.

    Mr. Augustus Powei, an envoy from Arogbo Kingdom, decried the high level of underdevelopment while maintaining that the emergence of the new King would turn such fearful scenario for good.

    “When we came in, we saw that the only primary school in the community is not well built at all, this indicates that the government in the area have long forgotten our people and with the coronation of of the King today is a sign that we want to now bring the attention of the government to our people, which has been culturally disorganised because of the lack of government presence in our community,” Powei noted

    The leader of Odigbo Local Government legislative house in Ondo State, Hon. Akiuro Dayo, pledged to sponsor a bill tailored towards the development of Tubutoru Kingdom. He decried the high level of underdevelopment in  the Kingdom, adding that the feat will be achieved by working with the Chairman of the Council and the Councilor representing Ebijoh Ward on the Council, Hon. Ayebi Oteigha who is also the Chief whip of Odigbo legislative house.

  • Emerging face of Araromi-Ale Kingdom

    Towards the border city of Badagry, Lagos State is located a serene kingdom called Ale before its name was changed to Araromi-Ale Kinngdom. Although it has had its name changed due to public misconception of it, Araromi-Ale kingdom has retained its uniqueness among other Yoruba kingdoms. One of such is the fact that its progenitors and leaders are called Oga-Ilu (head of the community) rather than the Oba which they are called in most Yoruba kingdoms.

    In spite of its allure, something remains strange about Araromi-Ale. The kingdom had been without an Oga-Ilu for 50 years. However, in February 2013, Chief Jelili Adele Ashade, Gboyed I, was appointed as the first government-recognised Baale of Aworo Community in Araromi-Ale kingdom. Interestingly, Araromi-Ale is about to be more recognised for something more phenomenal. Chief Jelili recently announced that the kingdom will be thrown into commemoration as they celebrate the lives of his father and his great grandfather. The two will be given a burial befitting of royals today.

  • Oba Akanbi brings transformation to ancient Iwo kingdom

    Oba Abdulrasheed Akanbi became the new Oluwo of Iwo last November. Not only did he vow to serve his people with everything he has, he promised to transform the serene town as much as he can. The respected monarch has kept to his words and has earned the love and respect of his people.

    Since he became the Oluwo of Iwo, the ancient town has been undergoing great transformation. Apart from the rehabilitation of the palace mosque and the new look the palace is wearing with a new palace extension built and commissioned by the Sultan of Sokoto, the new monarch has embarked on a few more projects.

    A few days back, the Oluwo announced that the Osun State town had attained the status of an empire and should henceforth be called the Greater Iwo Empire. With the new development, he said, the people of Iwo would start enjoying improved welfare. According to him, having an empire in the modern day is not about winning wars; it is about dreams, aspirations and how to drive towards set goals. He explained that one of his goals is to feed anyone who is hungry. This, he said, would be done through the food bank programme at the palace, three days a week. In addition to this, a clothing donation bank has been placed at strategic positions within the city for collection of used and new clothes and shoes from donors.

    A new National Open University Centre has also been set up, while state-of-the-art medical equipment costing about N1 billion to equip the state hospital has also been arranged for. The equipment is said to be on its way to Nigeria from Canada. Akanbi and his team are also fixing the 40-kilometre Iwo-Osogbo Road with the support of the Osun State Government.

    Oba Akanbi has proven to be a competent leader who is passionate about the lost glory of Iwo town.

  • Help me rid my kingdom of miscreants, Kalabari monarch pleads

    Help me rid my kingdom of miscreants, Kalabari monarch pleads

    It was supposed to be a political campaign by the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate representing Akuku-Toru/Asari-Toru Federal constituency in the National Assembly, Dr. Dawari George, who is seeking re-election. But  His Royal Majesty, King Disrael Gbobo Bob-Manuel, the Gbobo II, Owokosi Xi, used the opportunity to express concern over miscreants in his domain.

    The monarch made an unusual plea to the lawmaker: “Please help me clean the area of miscreants.”

    Looking around the communities visited, including Buguma, Abonema and Ido communities, it was easy to understand why the monarch made the appeal. Walking around the streets in the area, dozens of youths could be seen hanging around, smokin Indian hemp . Some of them looked mean and seemed like boys who would do anything for money.

    The monarch noted that there was need to improve the security of the area if the Kalabari kingdom wants to experience development.

    He said security is the most important thing to them considering the terrain which nature has made available to them. He said his people enjoy travelling on the water than road, adding that for them to do their business freely and enjoy their movement in the creeks and on the roads, the issue of security must be addressed.

    The monarch also pleaded with the lawmaker to discuss with his counterparts who are representing the area in different capacities to facilitate the only road in Kalabari Kingdom linking Degema, Buguma and Abonema. He revealed that he had made a lot of efforts to ensure that Federal Government  repairs the road.

    “Please help us provide security and clean up the place of miscreants to allow us travel in peace and do our businesses freely, especially through our creeks. We enjoy travelling on the water instead of road. I don’t feel comfortable travelling in the bus, a distance from Abonema to Port Harcourt is like travelling to Kano. But on the sea, one feels comfortable without any form of heat. The security of the area is very important to our people; I know you as a very quiet and peace-loving person. I enjoy your leadership influence. There is no member of your party or your supporters that you will ask to sit down and he or she will disobey.  That shows they respect you.   Just like I have told the other parties, the Kalabari area needs peace. We are not ready to witness another crisis that probably could lead to burning of houses. We are not ready to run away from our communities because of violence.

    “All we want to do is to participate in party politics and to bring development to our area. Tell your supporters that you are a man of peace and you want the process to be peaceful. I have no doubt that you will enthrone peace in the area so that we would be alive to vote for the candidate of our choice. This is your constituency. We are aware of your contributions to the development of our communities. The empowerment programmes which you brought to the area and so many other projects you initiated, we are happy about them.

    “There are things I believe that you should spearhead, particularly in Kalabari.  Though you have mentioned quite a lot of them, I am happy about that, but as a federal lawmaker, I will want you to work with your colleagues and ensure that the only road we have in Kalabari that is connected to Degema, Buguma and  Abonema should be constructed. That road is in a state of despair. I have personally mentioned it to Mr. President, but it is the task of the lawmaker to push for it.”

    He went on: “I want to advise you, like you have always done in the past, try to remember your constituency and create an opportunity to hold meetings with us because there are so many things you have done in this constituency that we are not aware of. Some of these projects I am just hearing about it today, some I heard it from people. Be that as it may, on behalf of the people of Abonema, I bless you and pray for you to go and bring peace and development to our land.”

    George thanked the monarch  for accepting him and his supporters in his palace  and for appreciating some of his constituency projects sited in the area and other Kalabari communities.

    On the monarch’s call for improved security, the lawmaker said: “To end insecurity in the area is the responsibility of all. You will not see me on the Election Day carrying guns and other weapons; it is the same youths who are supposed to carry their voters’ card to vote that may engage in violence on the election day.

    “Look, leadership is the ability to inspire people to follow what you believe in. I will not sponsor anybody to engage in violence, but I will rather preach against it. Today, apart from the local government, there are no businesses and company in my constituency because everyone is scared of insecurity. Insecurity has been the setback of the development of our communities. So, we are responsible for it because those of us who find ourselves in the position of power have failed to let the people know that when there is no peace, development cannot take place. First and foremost, I will ensure that peace reign in the area so that all those projects I have initiated and those yet to be initiated can be executed and sustained.”

    George recalled his convenant with the people in 2011. He said although he might not have fulfilled all the promises, he had done a lot to justice his call for a fresh mandate. “We believe that for us to be fair, there is need for us to renew that mandate so that we can continue with what we have started.  When we started, we told them that legislative work is mainly for lawmaking but we will concentrate more on the oversight function which include development, planning and empowerment.

    “What I have done is to attract many projects, particularly in education and water, which have been identified as a major challenge in the area. We have also built bridge, general empowerment, skill and unskilled projects and other programmes that will re-position our people to be able to run their lives as they should. We also try to provide leadership so that despite the challenges we can work together and live in unity, we can make progress for ourselves and the community. I have introduced a platform that will bring change and foster relationship among our people. And when this is done, all other development can flow.”

     

  • Kingdom without its king

    Kingdom without its king

    Gwoza once enchanted its residents with a scenic rocky landscape, prestigious mobile police training school and revered monarchy. Now, this kingdom in Borno State has been seized by Boko Haram insurgents who have turned it into their caliphate headquarters, its monarch sheltering far away from his throne. DUKU JOEL reports

    A black flag now flies over the town. Its people feel assaulted, conquered and having lost all. Until the Nigerian military reclaims Gwoza, that feeling will persist.

    The town was until August 6th,  a part of Borno State, submitting to the Nigerian constitution. But on that day Abubakar Shekau, leader of the dreaded Boko Haram insurgents declared the town the administrative headquarters of his Islamic caliphate.

    The people’s fondness for their rocks has been cut off. The impressive Nigeria Mobile Police Training School located in their community has been taken over by the invaders while a new Emir chosen by Boko Haram has been installed.

    Gwoza Emir, Mustapha Idrissa Timta ran away when he was informed that the insurgents were approaching his domain.

    He ascended the throne after gunnmen ambushed and killed his father, Idrissa Timta who was the Emir. Timta and three other Emirs were travelling in a convoy along Tashan Alade in Biu Local Government of Borno State on their way to Gombe to attend the burial of the late Emir of Gombe Shehu Abubakar when their assailants killed them.

    The death of his father did not stop the travails of the town as their woes merely continued. In one of the attacks on his kingdom, the young Emir escaped by the whiskers and went into hiding. For several days, the Mandara hills became his home before he was rescued and brought to Maiduguri where he has been sheltering.

    Mustapha Timta’s sojourn in Maiduguri away from his people has left him just as shattered as his subjects. He is fed up with life in forced exile.

    His greatest prayer is for the Nigerian government and President Goodluck Jonathan to recover his kingdom from the hands of the insurgents and return him to his throne. Mustapha Timta also wants the military to step up and sustain operations against the insurgents.

    Unfortunately, the embattled traditional ruler never really had time to enjoy what it takes traditional ruler as he had to flee for his life only a few days after he succeeded his father.

    He said he was at the Presidential Villa earlier when his domain fell to the insurgents and was able to extract a promise from the President to recover the town. He wants the President to live up to that promise.

    He said: “I am calling on the president of this country Goodluck Jonathan to fulfil the promise he made to me in Abuja that he will ensure that he takes back Gwoza from the hands of Boko Haram so that my people will go back to their abode”.

    The people of the community are today scattered all over, with some of them making the mountains their home. Several others remain unaccounted for. Those who could not run for their lives are living in Gwoza but in fear and hardship. His lamentation is that his people are experiencing serious hardship in different locations in the country.

    “It is unfortunate that I have been disconnected with many of my people who are suffering in different parts of the country. I feel so sad that I cannot reach out to them. I wish to appeal to the Federal Government to come to the aid of our people. As I am talking to you, many of them are trapped in Cameroon and many others are taking refuge in various places here in Nigeria. We appreciate the efforts of both the Federal Government and the Borno State government but a lot need to be done so that our people would go back home,” the Emir said.

    He called on his people to thank God for being alive and to continue praying for peace to return. But it is obvious that with the renaming of Gwoza as Darul Hikma  (house of wisdom) by  the Boko Haram insurgents, the hope of  His Royal Highness Mustapha Idrissa Timta of returning back to his kingdom is obvious not in the near future.

  • Enter Igwe of Malabo Kingdom

    Enter Igwe of Malabo Kingdom

    The Federation of Igbo Students (FIS) at the University of Calabar (UNICAL) has picked Henry Chinedu Umeokonkwo as its Igwe (the king), ending the four-year battle for the stool, reports EMMANUEL AHANONU (Political Science).

    After a long battle, the Federation of Igbo Students (FIS) at the University of Calabar (UNICAL) has resolved its differences, with the selection of Henry Chinedu Umeokonkwo as its Igwe (king).

    The stool was established in 1994 to serve as a symbol of unity for Igbo students. The former Igwe, Gabriel Ejikeme, then a Public Administration student, spent five years on the throne. When he graduated, he could not hand over because of the crisis rocking the association. Ejikeme and his chiefs were accused of dictatorship and maladministration.

    Ejikeme served as the Eze mmuo (chief priest) before he was selected by 24 of the 34 kingmakers to lead the association.

    The crisis deepened in 2011 when some members challenged Ejikeme’s right to hold the Ofala. They said he lacked the authority to organise the event because he had graduated. According to tradition, an Igwe whose tenure has ended does not have the right to hold the festival.

    However, instead of holding the historic event on the campus as tradition prescribes, Ejikeme took it to Airport Field, an off-campus location. After the festival, he convened a council of elders’ (chiefs) meeting to choose a new Igwe. The meeting ended in a deadlock.

    One of the contenders accused Ejikeme of monetising the stool.

    After a series of failed handover attempts, as none of the contenders met the Igwe’s criteria, Ejikeme left office.

    Despite his exit, the group remained polarised. All efforts to instal a new Igwe and restore peace in FIS failed because of what some students described as traditional restriction, which allows only the outgoing Igwe to crown the new Igwe and his chiefs.

    To salvage the situation, some of the chiefs, who served under Ejikeme were contacted to prevail on him to perform his traditional duty. He agreed and few days later, the process of choosing a new Igwe started.

    As expected, Ejikeme played a major role, breaking the kolanuts and pouring libation to ordain incoming chiefs. Two old chiefs screened the contenders for the stool and tested their knowledge of Igbo culture and tradition.

    The incoming chiefs were allowed to choose their chieftaincy names but some names attracted special condition. For instance, anyone who chose Ogbuefi (one who kills cow) must either kill a cow or buy parts of a cow for the old chiefs.

    The Igwe’s selection was full of drama. It took hours before the old and incoming chiefs gave Ejikeme the nod to crown his successor. Before Ejikeme performed that duty, he was made to swear an oath that his reign would not exceed a year.

    At a ceremony held at Abang Arang in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, Henry Chinedu Umeokonkwo, a 300-Level Public Administration student, who took the title of Ogbuefi Na Uko Efi was crowned the 13th Igwe of Malabo Kingdom. He chose the name: Mmiri Mara Ugo 1ofMalabo(rain that falls on eagle).

    The chiefs, who scaled the tough screening, were also conferred titles with their wives.

    There was a celebration on the night of the coronation; some chiefs came with their wives to rejoice with the Igwe. Members of the association were served Igbo delicacies, such as Ugba (African salad), palm wine, pepper soup, roasted yam, gin and kolanut.

    The Igwe’s first Ofala festival was held simultaneously with this year’s Igbo Cultural Day, which took place at Malabo Square.

    The Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof James Epoke, represented by his deputy on Academic, Prof Austin Obiekezie; Dean of Students’ Affairs Prof Eyong Eyong, represented by Mr Emmanuel Emore; Director of General Studies, Dr Chike Ekeopara; pioneer FIS president Azubuike Iloakasi, and second Igwe of Malabo Kingdom, Charles Njoku, were in attendance.

    The VC praised the Igbo students for holding onto their culture. He charged them to be steadfast in their academic pursuit, saying: “While you are passing through the school, you should also allow the school to pass through you, and that cannot be possible if you are such a student who goes from your hostel to class from class back to hostel. You must dedicate time to read your books.”

    In his speech, Igwe Henry listed the criteria for the award of chieftaincy titles. He said: “To be conferred with a chieftaincy in Malabo Kingdom, you must have moral and academic excellence. You must be one who commands respect on campus.”

    He urged his chiefs and members to promote excellence and Igbo culture.

    There was a cultural contest in which students from the Southeast participated; each state showcased its peculiar attire and food. Anambra State emerged the best. The event also featured wrestling as done in traditional Igbo society; news broadcast in Igbo, cultural dance by students and drama.

    The association unveiled its almanac and honoured some of its members, including the president, Ekene Odumegwu.

  • Ogbe-Ijoh Kingdom inaugurates Governing Council

    Ogbe-Ijoh Kingdom inaugurates Governing Council

    The Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Traditional Council in Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State on Wednesday inaugurated a new governing council to administer the affairs of the Kingdom for the next two years.

    The council, led by Lucky Oromoni, was sworn in by the Regent of Ogbe-Ijoh, Chief Samson Mamamu, at Ogbe-Ijoh, headquarters of Warri South West Local Government Area.

    Chief Mamamu, in his address at the brief ceremony held at the town hall, noted that from time immemorial, the kingdom has had five arms of its traditional government comprising the Traditional Council, Governing Council, Elders Forum, Women and youth wings of the Kingdom.

    Noting that the ceremony came barely 18 months after the demise of the traditional ruler (Pere of Ogbe-Ijoh Clan), he appealed to every member of the Kingdom to remain law abiding in the days ahead.

    He said: ‘The tenure of the last Governing Council expired since 23rd October, 2013, and by the special grace of God, we are to inaugurate the new council to take up the welfare of the Kingdom. We have sailed through a number of undemocratic anomalies. We resettled our minds and are able to marry them into peace. It is our appeal to the Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Kingdom to love themselves, cooperate in pursuing their national needs towards bigger victory.”

    Mamamu warned that the commonwealth of the Kingdom must not be mismanaged or hijacked by few to create poverty for the larger society.

    “Mismanagement of victory is the beginning of poverth,” he stated, adding that those who are yet to achieve their aspirations into the council must be patient and join hands with those elected for the overall good and development of Ogbe-Ijoh.

    Among those inaugurated on Wednesday were Wurusibewei Diebo (Assistant Secretary), Ebibor Dio, Godwin Enighan, Isaiah Afodor, Stephen Anegba, Garenwei Eyoroagagha and Jeremiah Toweh Financial Secretary, and members respectively.

    The chairman of the electoral committee, A. O Kokori said the candidates for the position of Vice Chairman and PRO were disqualified while Secretary elect, Mr Simon T could not be cleared because of petition.

    Addressing the traditional council and other members of the Kingdom after thep inauguration, Hon Oromoni assured that his team would live above board and would consult the traditional council before major decisions would be taken.

    He promised to constitute a constitution review committee to review the 2003 Ogbe-Ijoh Kingdom Constitution, adding, ‘We shall also as a matter of priority, key into the peace and security agenda of the state government and to ensure complete peace in Ogbe-Ijoh Kingdom. We shall also ensure that all ongoing projects are completed and execute new projects within the period of our tenure in office.’

    The ceremony was attended by Chief Favour Izoukumor, Fiyewei of Ogbe-Ijoh, chiefs A D Oyibo, Samuel Ogbokeme, Friday Igbegbe, John Ajemitolo, Mrs Veronica Eselemon, Newton Aloku andi Broderick Donokoromo.

    Others are chiefs David Pere, Adviser of the council, Michael Azosibe, Richard Evene, Tony Tekedor and Harrison Gbenekama.