Tag: monarch

  • Abia monarch, women back anti-corruption fight

    Abia monarch, women back anti-corruption fight

    Former chairman, Abia State Traditional Rulers’ Council, Eze Isaac Ikonne has reiterated his confidence in the President Muhammadu Buhari administration, urging residents to support the war against corruption.

    The Enyi 1 of Aba was the only traditional ruler in the state who welcomed then candidate Buhari into his palace, conferring him with the title Ogbuagu 1 of Aba.

    That action earned the monarch attacks by his fellow rulers, but he has not relented in his strong belief that the Buhari administration will restore the country’s lost glory.

    Eze Ikonne spoke as members of the President Buhari Grassroots Movement, Abia State Women Wing, visited him.

    He described the war on corruption as a step in the right direction, saying it will help to sanitise the system.

    The leader of the group, Rev. Mrs. Chinedu Nwogwugwu said they support President Buhari because of his sincerity in the anti-corruption fight in addition to his leadership antecedents.

    Lamenting how moneybags and unscrupulous politicians use women during campaigns and dump them thereafter, she urged women to engage in meaningful ventures.

    The women also held a rally at the Eziama Osusu Hall at Faulks Road, Aba, where Nwogwugwu lamented the extent and effects of corruption in the country.

    “It is unfortunate that during campaign and electioneering period, you will see our women going from one place to another and at the end, the politician will give them peanuts that will not be enough to buy even bread for the children and most times after they were elected and sworn into office, they will abandon the people that suffered to campaign for them. We are now being used as object of ridicule in the hands of politicians and that is why we are calling on them (women) to come out and join the president in his fight against corruption which has eaten deep into the economy of the country even more than cancer.”

     

  • Monarch seeks LASU VC from Badagry, Ikeja

    Monarch seeks LASU VC from Badagry, Ikeja

    Monarch of Iba Kingdom, Oba Goriola Oseni, has praised Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for inaugurating the Governing Council of the Lagos State University (LASU) with membership spreading across the state’ six divisions.

    He said such fairness displayed by Ambode not only in LASU, but in councils of other tertiary institutions owned by Lagos State, would likely put paid to incessant crises in the institutions.

    Speaking with The Nation ahead of activities to mark his 40th anniversary on the throne, Oba Oseni, whose jurisdiction hosts LASU, said this is the first time such Council with membership would be so constituted.

    “We have been shouting that each time they constitute a Council, none of our sons and daughters from Badagry division would be there. We now have representatives across the six divisions in Lagos.  If government could do this, I can assure you there would be no problem in LASU. We are more likely to witness tranquility if things are done geographically, “he added.

    However, he also appealed to the governor to consider qualified sons of Epe and Ikeja divisions for the top job at LASU.

    “I am appealing to him (Ambode) to consider Badagry Division and Ikeja Division in the appointment of the next vice chancellor of LASU. From the look of things, the two divisions had never enjoyed such privilege,” Oseni pleaded.

    Oba Oseni is also happy that Iba community now enjoys students’ cooperation unlike about a decade ago when bad eggs from the university held the community hostage.

    “I recall the students’ excesses reached the peak about 10 years ago.  But I don’t think any LASU student can perpetrate any atrocity within this community again. Those here are law abiding. The Awori in general love strangers and accommodate them,” he said.

     

  • Rivers police, monarch unite against cultism, kidnapping

    Rivers police, monarch unite against cultism, kidnapping

    The Paramount Ruler of Port Harcourt City, Rivers State, His Royal Majesty, Eze Victor Woluchem II, Epara Rebisi XII of Rebisi Kingdom and the Rivers Police Command, have joined forces to fight insecurity in the state, particularly within the Port Harcourt City.

    The deal was struck recently when the Commissioner of Police, CP Musa Kimo visited the monarch at his palace in Port Harcourt,

    They agreed that the most nagging issue that requires the cooperation of both the police and community leaders is the worrisome issue of cultism and kidnapping.

    Kimo, who assumed duty in the state on September 2, expressed displeasure at the prevailing high rate of insecurity in the state. He assured that it was possible to end kidnapping and cultism with the cooperation of community leaders.

    He said as an officer who understood the importance of community relations and the contribution of community leaders for effective policing, it would be wrong if he failed to visit the palace.

    CP Kimo identified cultism and kidnapping in the state as major concerns that require the assistance of everyone. He said there was no casualties and looting of private and public properties during the recent crisis and civil disturbance in Port Harcourt caused by the protest of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) because the Police took absolute control of the situation.

    He said, “The truth is that cultism and kidnapping are the issues that are most pressing to us now and with cooperation of the good people of Rivers state, especially the traditional rulers, elders and the youths, we are going to triumph and do better for the peace of the state. My visit to His Royal Majesty is to seek his blessings to be successful in my sojourn in Rivers State. The police cannot do it alone, so we are here to present ourselves to the monarch and abide with him. We also believe that the monarch and his council will abide with us too.”

    HRM Eze Victor Woluchem II, the Epara Rebisi XII, said:  “When I saw you, I said you are a young and energetic officer. So, you will be able to carry on the affairs of the state. Port Harcourt is a homogenous city, you must be ready to fight so as to achieve. You have been able to reduce drastically the impunity of bad behaviours in the state; at least the criminals will know that someone is on their trail. With the recent foiling of a major robbery by police where millions of naira was recovered, that is a feat anyone should commend.

    “With you in Rivers State, I know kidnapping, armed robbery and cultism will reduce. If you find any case of kidnapping or armed robbery in the youths of Rebisi Kingdom, it will be very rare. The only thing my youths do is to look for legitimate job in Trans- Amadi because it is our land.

    “However because the throne was vacant for some time people infiltrated that space and formed political chiefs who went to Trans -Amadi to create problems. I want you to ensure that the issue of Biafra protest stops here.  Port Harcourt would never be a home for Biafra. I vowed that as a Monarch of Port Harcourt City I will not take it for granted if Biafra repeat any other protest in Port Harcourt,” the Royal father said.

  • Monarch asks Ambode to strengthen  traditional institutions

    Monarch asks Ambode to strengthen traditional institutions

    The newly installed Kakanfo of Ilara Kingdom, Epe Lagos State Otunba Gbolahan Nowoola has urged Governor Akinwunmi Ambode to strengthen traditional institutions for effective service to the people.

    Speaking during his installation at Epe, the monarch said there was urgent need to mobilise the people at the grassroots to realise government’s policies and prgrammes.

    Nowoola added that the donation of vehicles by Ambode to first-class kings in the state was commendable; stressing that it was a support for grassroots development.

    He said: “Governor Ambode respects royal institutions; recently he gave all the first-class kings two vehicles to support their kingdom.

    “This will go a long way in garnering support for government’s policies and programmes, even as it would help in transforming the state. It is a tradition laid by Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and followed by Mr. Babatunde Fashola.’’

    He said as the newly installed Kakanfo of Ilara, his brief is to defend the people against external aggression.

    “My people should expect me to defend them in case of any fight. I am expected to mediate in family crisis and settle misunderstanding arising from boundary disputes that could lead to war,” he said.

    He maintained that as a former soldier, he had the quality to lead and defend his people when the need arises.

    He noted that his new post is in compliance with tradition. “My forefathers did it, we fought the colonial authorities when we were still under the Ijebu Kingdom.

    “The colonial masters had to carve Ilara, Epe, Somolu and Sagamu out of Ijebu Province and merged us with the Lagos Province to whittle our strength,” he said.

    He called for support for President Muhammadu Buhari in order to achieve government’s drive for a better society.

    “The man has not even started working but things have been working because of his name. The new slogan in town is that the fear of Buhari is the beginning of wisdom. Nigerians should support him,” he said.

  • Monarch drums up support for anti-graft war

    Monarch drums up support for anti-graft war

    The traditional ruler of Ossomala Kingdom in Anambra State, Chief Victor Awogu, has urged traditional institutions to support President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-graft war.

    He spoke yesterday when he visited Vintage Press Limited, publisher of The Nation.

    Awogu said the war against graft would be accomplished if government at all levels were involved in the crusade.

    He said as custodians of morals, traditional rulers were better positioned to show good examples, adding that they were better positioned to fish out criminals within their domains.

    The monarch hinted that traditional rulers should be accorded the fourth level of governance.

    “It comes before the local government, which is a conglomerate of several towns. In these communities, there must be peace for things to functional well and that depends on the traditional rulers.”

    He noted that those not happy with the fight against graft would want to frustrate it, adding that Nigerians must be resolute in the crusade.

    “The government is doing well in its fight against corruption. Again, if you fight corruption, it will fight back. We can all see it that corruption is fighting back.”

    He urged government to fight corruption in its totality, irrespective of political, religious affiliation.

    “The court has to prove them guilty and whoever has done wrong should pay for his or her sins no matter the side of the divide he belongs to, they must account.

    “Whoever has consumed what does not belong to him or her must return it. There should not be any selectivity.”

    On the issue of approving state policing, he said Nigeria was not fully prepared for state policing.

    “It is a long-standing issue and lots of interests are involved. Nigeria, whether we like it or not, is a conglomeration of different ethnic groups. Again, is Nigeria actually prepared for armed groups in the name of state police?

    “We are not prepared and I stand by that. Nigeria is not well positioned, not yet ripe for armed groups. We are talking of 36 constitutionally armed groups, when we talk of state police. So, you are talking of 36 independent armed bodies. If you add that to the proliferation of small arms, the question we ask ourselves is, are we prepared for it?”

    The traditional ruler said the type of state police the country had in the past did not have the kind of power being canvassed because, according to him, the state police of the past were restricted to skeletal services.

     

  • Deposed monarch appeals judgment

    The monarch of Igbindo community in Ondo West Local Government Area of Ondo State, Mr. Olanji Ogundoju, who was sacked by a court has appealed the judgement.

    Ogundoju, who is from Ogbowo Okun Ruling House, was sued by some Princes from the same ruling house, led by Adetutu Fashole and Okunade Makinde Fashole on the grounds that he was not eligible for the throne. 

    Their grudge against him was that the embattled Prince hails from the female lineage of the Ogbowo Okun Ruling House and he is not entitled to the throne. 

    In his ruling on July 28, Justice O. A. Adegbehingbe of the State High Court held that since only sons from the male lineage could be made monarch, “Ogundoju is not eligible to contest and ascend the vacant stool of the Akinnuwa of Igbindo from the Ogbowo Ruling House, whose turn it was to fill the vacant stool, having hailed from the female line of the ruling house”. 

    In Ogundoju’s appeal filed by his lawyer, Mr. Kunle Adetowubo, urged the appellate court to set aside the lower court’s judgment and return his client as the rightful occupant of the throne. 

    In the eight grounds of appeal, the lawyer said the trial court ignored testimonies of the witnesses presented by his client to establish the fact that children from the female line of Otutubiosun Ruling House reigned as kings of community at different times. 

    He added that the lower court also failed to appreciate both written and oral testimonies of appellant’s witnesses which substantially complied with the provisions of section 18(1) of the Evidence Act 2011 (as amended). 

    The lawyer said: “That the court failed to establish the fact that members of the Ogbowo Okun Ruling House properly concluded the nomination of Ogundoju as the traditional ruler of the town. 

    “It is not the law, custom and tradition of the Igbindo people that only male from the ruling houses are qualified to aspire, be nominated, as Akinnuwa of Igbindo.  

    “We want the court to establish this that the appointment of Ogundoju as the Oba of Igbindo was approved by the entire members of Ogbowo Okun houses, including those who took him to court and the kingmakers.” 

     

  • Tension in Ekiti community over monarch’s installation

    There is tension in Irepodun/Ifelodun Local Government Area of Ekiti State, three days after the installation of Oba Afeez Sulaiman as the new Alawo of Awo-Ekiti.

    Sulaiman was presented with the instruments of office by Governor Ayo Fayose on Friday after the youth of the community had protested for nearly three hours.

    One of the princes who contested for the Alawo seat with Sulaiman, Bunmi Alade, was reported to have died “mysteriously” on Thursday at 8.30 am.

    His remains were yet to be buried when the government decided to present the staff of office to Sulaiman on Friday.

    The Awo youths maintained that the installation of Alawo should be delayed as long as Alade’s body was still in the mortuary.

    They had trooped out at 9am blocking the major road that passes through the town, singing war songs.

    The protesters held palm fronds and poured ashes and coconut oil at many junctions.

    Condemning the circumstances surrounding the emergence of the Alawo, they alleged that the oracle was sidelined, which they said was contrary to tradition.

    Motorists and commuters passing through the community had a hard time as traffic, commercial and social activities were paralysed.

    The protesters later stormed the palace square, venue of the installation ceremony, and upturned canopies and chairs arranged for the programme.

    Fayose visited the deceased’s family.

    A source said locals are  living in fear after Friday’s protest.

    Security has been strengthened to prevent a breakdown of law and order.

    He said: “There is tension in our town (Awo) and nobody knows what may happen next because the youth are not happy with the circumstances surrounding Alade’s death.

    “He was invited to a meeting and few hours later, he fell ill and was rushed to at least two hospitals in Ado-Ekiti.

    “What pained the youth was that they suspected foul play in his death and that government supposed to have postponed the installation.”

    Police spokesman Alberto Adeyemi could not be reached for comments.

  • Ugbo praise Mimiko, monarch

    Ugbo praise Mimiko, monarch

    A group, the Ugbo Central Working Committee on Oil and Gas, has lauded Ondo State Governor Olusegun Mimiko and the Olugbo of Ugbo, Oba Frederick Akinruntan, for the dissolution and the re-constitution of oil committees in Ilaje land.

    The group said the reconstitution will capture and carry along stakeholders to sustain and maintain the peace.

    It said naturally the compositions of oil committee are purely community affairs and is accepted by the Ilaje Ugbo central working committee on oil and gas.

    The group appealed to the governor to call some government agents, most especially the ministry of environment, to cooperate with the committee to provide succour to the people.

  • Monarch celebrates new yam

    Monarch celebrates new yam

    The traditional ruler of Nike Kingdom in Enugu State, Igwe Julius Nnaji has celebrated the New Yam festival with fanfare. It was an occasion which attracted dignitaries in the state including Governor Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi.

    Also in attendance were members of the Enugu State executive council, local government chairmen, security chiefs, members of the state and National Assembly as well as other traditional leaders from within and outside Enugu.

    There were as well different dancing troupes and orchestra bands in place to entertain the large turnout of crowd that trooped to witness the occasion.

    Igwe Nnaji was assisted by members of his community to perform the rituals associated with New Yam festivals with his wife by his side.

    The Igbo refer to the wife of their Igwe or Eze as Lolo, but the Nike community and indeed entire Nkanu prefer them to be called Ugoeze. And Igwe Nnaji insisted on this during the yam feast.

    The ceremony was flagged off with the Ugoeze accompanied by women of the community bringing out several tubers of yam and presenting them to the Igwe and members of his cabinet. That aspect was actually a solemn occasion as the women tenderly carried the yams as they were carrying eggs.

    After the presentation, the Igwe significantly gave out to the Ugoeze, a tuber of yam and one cock to prepare for him. That done, freshly roasted yams were brought to the Igwe with palm oil sauce prepared with Ugba (oil bean seed).

    The Igwe cut a piece and dipped into the palm oil sauce and did justice to it. There was applause. The ceremony kicked off. There was a lot of yam to eat. Mention it. Roasted, boiled, fried, pounded, porridge etc were distributed to all and sundry at the occasion.

    There were other delicacies and various types of traditional Igbo soups. Drinks were inexhaustible using them to wash down varieties of the bush meat served.

    All the dignitaries that graced the occasion were each presented with two tubers of yam and a live cock.

    Igwe Nnaji told the gathering that yam regarded as the king of the crops in Igboland is being celebrated yearly not only in his community but the entire communities in Igboland.

    Giving an insight of how yam is regarded in his community, the Igwe said if anybody matches on yam in the community, that person has to perform some rituals to appease the gods and cleanse himself from the “abomination”.

    He urged Ndigbo never to allow “this tradition to go the way of others.” He thanked the Governor Ugwuanyi for “squeezing out time in his tight schedule to grace the occasion”, adding, “this shows you love my family and the entire Nike community.”

    The chairman of Enugu East local council where Nike community falls into, Hon. Cornelius  Nnaji, who is the younger brother of the traditional ruler expressed gratitude to God that the event went well as planned.

    He thanked the governor for “gracing the occasion with almost the entire members of the executive council.”

    The local council boss who is also the Enugu state ALGON chairman promised that the next yam festival of the community would improve on this and thanked all and sundry that made it a success.

     

  • Akure: A monarch and his political ambition

    A friend had invited me to a social event in the thick of the presidential election campaign. At the table were my friend and two other men, one of whom was already known to me as both of us had discussed politics during some chance encounters. Proudly an Ondo town man, he never saw anything wrong with the Mimiko and Jonathan administrations while I would argue that Iroko is the worst to ever happened to the people of Ondo State since the invention of plywood and that Jonathan was the most pathetic and incompetent president in Nigeria’s history. Since I never met the other guy at the table, I was introduced by our mutual friend at whose behest I was at the event. Almost as a sidekick, our mutual friend drew, jokingly, our attention to the fact that all the three of us are from the same state, except him, being a Lagosian.

    “Where’re you from in Ondo State?” the guy I was meeting for the first time asked me.

    “Akure,” I replied.

    “Ah! You people are not a force to be reckoned with. You’re not in charge of the state. We the Akokos and Ondos are,” he deadpanned.

    “I see,” I retorted. And he went on to give me some anecdotal instances to buttress his point. I was stunned. But I listened calmly with hardly anything to say as counter argument.

    What stunned me was not the veracity of his statement (as I have suspected long ago that Akure indigenes may largely be inconsequential in the state’s political scheme of things), but his audacity to rub this on the nose of someone he was meeting for the first time. That statement unsettles something in me each time I think about it.

    The new Deji of Akure, Oba AladetoyinboAladelusi’s coronation came at a time when politics and the business of politics were the only games in and across the Nigerian landscape. In the aftermath of his coronation, some members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) led by Barrister Isaac Kekemeke, the state chairman of the party, paid a courtesy visit to Oba Aladelusi. In a speech to these party stalwarts, the new Deji was reported to have indicated that the fundamental political objective and directive principle of his monarchy is to see an Akure indigene in the Alagbaka Government House after the 2016 governorship election. Also, during another courtesy visit by members of the Executive Council of the Akure Community Development Forum (ACDF) led by Chief Reuben Fasoranti, in a news report entitled: “Akure is next to rule Ondo, says Deji” in The Nation newspaper on Monday, August 24, Oba Aladelusi was reported to have reiterated his earlier stance that his desire is “to ensure that the state’s next governor is produced by [the] Akure community” and that he was ready to use his “influence and connections to ensure that his dream comes to fruition.” Oba Aladelusi said his “major ambition on the throne was to ensure [that an] Akure indigene becomes the governor” and “urged politicians and other eminent personalities who were (sic) indigenes of Akure to rally round him to ensure the realization of his dream.” The monarch was reported to have “lamented that Akure, despite being the state capital, has not produced the governor since Ondo State’s creation about 40 years ago.”

    One may never know if the Akure monarch’s desire to see an Akure indigene in the state’s Government House was a spur-of-the-moment, carefully crafted and politically correct rallying point to his subjects to close ranks after a rancorous kingship tussle. Neither can it be ascertained that this perceived sense of unfairness to Akure indigenes have always been embedded in the monarch’s subconscious, waiting for expression at the opportune time, which has now presented itself, having received the staff of office as the paramount ruler of the Akure kingdom. But whatever may be the reason(s) for Oba Aladelusi’s position, it was a profound and noble declaration that should be interrogated by not only Akure political elites, but also its well-meaning indigenes. It’s a call to duty that should engage the minds of Akure indigenes in a representative democracy.

    While the Oba is on the right track concerning what he sees as his subjects’ political disadvantage, who, incidentally, are adjudged as having the strongest voting strength in the state, it should also be stated in no uncertain terms, however, that the realization of Oba Aladelusi’s political ambition for his subjects lies not in mere bringing this disadvantage into the public consciousness, but rather in scrupulously looking at those fundamentals that may have inhibited an Akure indigene from ascending to the highest political office in the state. A good starting point, it seems to me, is this eerie feeling that the economic and political foundations of Akure’s political elites, critical to their ascendance in the state’s body politic, are much weaker relative to the economic and political architectures of other ethnic groups with which they must contest for political power. Their rancorous and fractious dispensation of their political capital in terms of their votes, to which Oba Aladelusi alluded in the news report when he said that he “regretted that indigenes of Akure have failed in the past to unite and speak with one voice” have almost always been their undoing.  Perhaps their weak economic and political strengths, coupled with their politics of “Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)” may have found their roots in their lack of psycho-emotional bonding that would have naturally predisposed them to lending each other some helping hands which seems to come natural to their ethnic counterparts such as the Akokos or Ondos. With the aforementioned, they may have unconsciously disempowered themselves, or may not have paid enough attention to how others have deliberately disempowered them in order to make it difficult, if not impossible, to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with other political heavyweights from other ethnic groups in the state. The present Mimiko administration which is practically a government of Ondo/Idanre/Oke-Igbo axis is a classic example. A government doesn’t get more exclusive than that.

    Perhaps Oba Aladelusi may want to take stock of the political elites and other eminent Akure personalities vis-à-vis the extent of their economic and political capacity as a group in Nigeria and the Diaspora by calling a summit of Akure indigenes as soon as practicable in order to chart a new and sustainable political course for his subjects. Perhaps it’s also important to interrogate further the monarch’s political ambition to see one of his subjects at the Alagbaka Government House in light of the political machinations that brought about the emergence of the Oba from among other contestants. As much as what the monarch said was important, it’s equally imperative to listen to what was not said. As a paramount ruler who owes his staff of office to Governor OlusegunMimiko, a Machiavellian political operative who will stop at nothing – literally – in his quest to dominate the southwest politics, one hopes that Oba Aladelusi (with all due respect to the crown and his person) is not being unsuspectingly goaded by one of the two “whitlows of the southwest” into making that declaration. One hopes that the statement was not a prelude to a “political IOU” that Governor Mimiko must extract from the monarch at election time to achieve a nefarious objective of dividing Akure voters, thereby rendering them inconsequential once again. Just as eternal vigilance is the prize of liberty, cognizance must be taken of Mimiko’s Machiavellian political maneuverings in different guise and coloration. Akure’s political interest will be better served in the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the long run even if its indigene fails to secure the governorship ticket in the next election.

    • Odere is a media practitioner. He can be reached at femiodere@gmail.com.