Tag: Oba Ewuare II

  • Herdsmen: Oba Ewuare II holds special security meeting

    Herdsmen: Oba Ewuare II holds special security meeting

    The Benin monarch, Oba Ewuare II, has convened a special security meeting to help tackle herdsmen menace, kidnapping, human trafficking and illegal migration.

    Part of the decision reached at the meeting was the need to set up a task force at each of the three senatorial districts as well as forming monitoring units at both the local and state levels to check the activities of herdsmen and other criminal activities.

    It was also agreed at the meeting that a committee headed by the Commissioner of Police should be set up to help develop a template that would be used by the State Council of Traditional Rulers and Chiefs in achieving the desired peace and tranquility in the state.

    Various security agents present at the meeting agreed to implement the decisions reached it would bring peace and tranquility to the state.

    The security agents however requested for adequate logistics to enable them tackle security challenges in the state.

    They also demanded for the provision of enough vehicles and communication equipment to enable them respond to emergency or distress calls.

    Village heads were requested to provide security agents with useful information that would enable them track down these criminal elements in the society.

    The monarch told the gathering that the purpose of the meeting was to hear from the security agencies on the way out of the security challenges in the state.

    Oba Ewuare II who expressed worries over crimes rates disclosed that he started putting plans together since 2015 on how to tackle the problems.

    He assured security chiefs present at the meeting that required logistic requested to ensure effective security of the state would be communicated to the State Government for immediate action.

    Leaders of the Hausa, Fulani and Nupe communities in Edo State who spoke separately blamed cattle dealers for security problem and stressed the need for concerted efforts to ensure that herdsmen who destroy farms were made to pay for them.

    They promised to hold meetings with village heads in the various local governments to sensitize them on how to handle the issue of cattle herdsmen.

    The meeting was attended by the various heads of security agencies in the state including the Police, the Army, the Directorate of State Security, the immigration, Prisons and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corp.

  • Benin monarch vows to deal with native laws’ violators

    The Oba of Benin, Oba Ewuare II, has vowed to deal with violators of native laws and customs in Benin City and its environs.

    A statement yesterday by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Desmond Agbama, said the monarch was determined to re-install native laws, rid the state of violence and guarantee peace.

    He said the warning was sequel to the submission of a report by the Benin Customary Alternate Dispute Resolution Committee.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the traditional ruler set up the committee on October 13 to handle and resolve communal matters, such as inheritance, land matters, family issues, among others.

    The committee Chairman, Justice Samson Uwaifo (retd), told the monarch respondents were not honouring the committee’s invitation.

    He said it was a development that had hampered dispensation of justice.

    The oba, receiving the report, said the palace would work out measures to deal with those who refused to honour the invitation.

    He hailed the performance  of Justice Uwaifo-led committee, urging members not to be deterred by challenges.

    The ruler assured the committee of his support.

  • Human trafficking: Group urges cartels to respect Oba of Benin’s condemnation

    Human trafficking: Group urges cartels to respect Oba of Benin’s condemnation

    A Benin-based Non-Governmental Organisation, the Initiative for Youth Awareness on Migration Development and Reintegration (IYAMIDR), led by Comrade Solomon Okoduwa, has urged human trafficking cartels to give up the illegal trade as a show of respect for the public condemnation of the ugly business by the Oba of Benin, Omo N’ Oba N’ Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, or face the wrath of the ancestors.

    The group said that the Benin Monarch’s pronouncement is law and has cleared the way for all Edo people to come out en-masse to fight against the criminal trade in human beings.

    “Nobody goes against the words of the highly revered Oba of Benin, and we wish to call on all Edo people who are into human trafficking to desist from it forthwith. No excuse is good enough for the trade in human beings and not even the flimsy excuse of poverty is sufficient basis for such inhuman exploitation of our people,” Okoduwa said.

    He maintained that Edo people are very industrious, creative and courageous “and the time has come for the few people who are into human trafficking to give it up as many Benin parents are raising great children from their small and medium scale businesses.”

    “We urge cartel in Europe and other parts of the world to renounce their trade and support for human traffickers or face the wrath of the ancestors. History is replete with the tragedies that befall people who go against the pronouncements of the Oba of Benin. In the past, those who went against the declaration of the Oba were either banished or faced a series of misfortunes.”

    The anti-human trafficking campaigner urged adherents of the traditional religion, some native doctors and priests who collaborate with the human trafficking cartels, using charms, oaths and other means to keep the victims in perpetual servitude, to release all such victims of human trafficking as a show of respect for the words of the Oba of Benin.

    “Prostitution was and is still a socially disapproved practice that gained popularity when society started celebrating easy money and later assumed the status of a profession in many dysfunctional homes and families.

    “We are proud of the several hardworking Edo women who dominate the oil and gas industry, the creative or entertainment industry, many in the academia, banking and finance, media and several other sectors of the economy. For example, we have Mrs. Ifueko Omoigui-Okauru who has made Edo people proud in administration. Professor Ameze Guobadia is a prominent law professor, Senator Daisy Danjuma has made us proud in politics and business, Mrs Adesuwa Oyenekwe, is clearly the most versatile television presenter around. Anne-Marie Imafidon, who was decorated by Queen Elizabeth II, with the prestigious honour of Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for her services to young women with specialty in Sciences, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM), recently in England, is a Benin lady.

    “Author and wife of former United States Ambassador to Nigeria, Mrs Arese Carrington, is a proud Edo woman same with Professor Osayamen Yinka Omorogbe, the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Edo State; Sandra Aguebor of the Female Mechanic Initiative and  Professor Helen Asemota, to mention a few,” the organisation said.

    Recall that the Benin Monarch, Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, on Wednesday during the inauguration of the Edo State Council of Traditional Rulers and Chiefs by Governor Godwin Obaseki, threw his weight and that of the Edo State Traditional Council behind the fight against illegal migration and human trafficking, which have claimed the lives of thousands of Edo youths.

    Oba Ewuare II expressed disappointment in the Nigerian Embassy in Libya and the Libyan government for their inability to tackle the crisis.

    He said it was particularly frustrating that it had to take a news report by the Cable News Network (CNN) for the government and other stakeholders to respond to the crisis.

    The Benin Monarch said the crisis could have been better managed if the relevant authorities lived up to their roles, instead of allowing it to fester. He commended the governor for his efforts at resettling and reintegrating the Libyan returnees through various skills acquisition programmes.

     

  • Monarch throws weight behind anti-human trafficking fight

    Monarch throws weight behind anti-human trafficking fight

    As Obaseki inaugurates Traditional Council

    …says 2-year jail term awaits fake kings, chiefs

    The Benin Monarch, Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, has thrown his weight and that of the Edo State Traditional Council behind the fight against illegal migration and human trafficking, which have claimed the lives of thousands of Edo youths.

    Oba Ewuare II, who spoke on Wednesday during the inauguration of the Edo State Council of Traditional Rulers and Chiefs by the Governor, Mr Godwin Obaseki, condemned the act and expressed disappointment in the Nigerian Embassy in Libya and the Libyan government for their inability to tackle the crisis.

    He said it was particularly frustrating that it had to take a news report by the Cable News Network (CNN) for the government and other stakeholders to respond to the crisis.

    The Benin Monarch said the crisis could have been better managed if the relevant authorities lived up to their roles, instead of allowing it to fester. He commended the governor for his efforts at resettling and reintegrating the Libyan returnees through various skills acquisition programmes.

    Inaugurating the traditional council, Governor Obaseki expressed his gratitude to the Benin Monarch and the other traditional rulers for their support to his administration since his inauguration in November, last year.

    He said that as an advisory body, his administration would continue “to consult the council on a wide range of issues from time to time and advised that a two-year jail term awaits any person that purports to create a traditional ruler title or any title purporting same to be traditional ruler title.”

    His Royal Majesty, Omo N’Oba N’Edo, Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, Oba of Benin and Chairman, Edo State Council of Traditional Rulers and Chiefs, Secretary to the Edo State Government, Osarodion Ogie Esq. (2nd from right, front row) and Chief of Staff to the Governor, Mr. Taiwo Akerele (right, front row), during the inauguration of the Edo State Council of Traditional Rulers and Chiefs at the Government House in Benin City on Wednesday,

    The governor explained that “This council is in accordance with the Traditional Rulers and Chiefs Law No. 16 of 1979 as amended by law No. 2 of 1993. Membership of this all-important Council is as provided for in Section 40 (2) a-d of the Amended Law No. 2 of 1993 with the Oba of Benin not only as Chairman but the Paramount Traditional Ruler as provided for in Section 2 of the Amended Law No. 2 of 1993.”

    He assured that his administration would continue to partner with the traditional council in the areas of law, order and security, stemming the tide of illegal migration, environmental sanitation, registration of Edo citizens and in the mobilisation of indigenes and residents of Edo State to participate in government policies and programmes, settlement of land disputes, agriculture, amongst others.

    Obaseki further said that the support of the traditional council would be needed in health programmes and urged them to sensitise people in their areas of jurisdiction to be alive to their civic duties such as the payment of taxes and voter registration exercise.

    He added that the various institutional reforms being implemented in the state have started yielding results as internally generated revenues by local councils have increased by 500 percent, from N30 million in November 2016, to N150 million in November this year.

  • Ijaws will have no inch of Edo land, say Edo traditional rulers

    Ijaws will have no inch of Edo land, say Edo traditional rulers

    Traditional rulers in Edo North and Edo Central Senatorial districts have risen in unison to warn that they would not allow the Ijaws carved out kingdoms out of an inch of Edo land.

    The traditional rulers said they backed the Edo State and Oba of Benin, Oba Ewuare II, in the stopping of the installation of one Godwin Ogunyenbo as the Pere of Olodiama Kingdom in Ovia North east Local government Area of Edo state.

    Speaking on Tuesday at a press briefing, the traditional rulers said the only recognized king in Edo South is the Oba of Bénin and described as abominable attempts by some traditional rulers from Bayelsa and Delta States to install another king in Edo South.

    First Vice Chairman of the Edo State Council of Traditional Rulers and Chiefs and Onojie of Opoji, His Royal Highness (HRH), Ehidiamen Aidonojie 1, urged security agencies to arrest and prosecute all the traditional rulers involved in the attempted coronation.

    His words, “It is misnomer for anybody to say Gelegele is part of Edo, Bayelsa and Delta States. A king from Bayelsa state came to the Oba last time to pay homage that his roots are here and now you see one Pere jumping over Warri to come here and install a king.

    “Our Oba has always welcome people. Late Okotie-Eboh was the Adolor of a Benin Kingdom. What the Pere from Delta and Bayelsa States did is unacceptable. The Portuguese entered Benin through Gelegele and it was the only port in Benin at that time.

    “If the Ijaws had wanted a chief, they would have pleaded with the Oba and he would have created a chieftaincy title for them. There can never be any other Kingdom in Edo South.”

    The Olokpe of Okpe, HRH Oba Idogun said they would not allow anyone or tribe trespass on any part of Edo land.

    His word, “Edo land is a property for the Edo people. We disagree with what the Peres of Bayelsa and Delta states did. We condemned their action.”

    Onojie of Ewu Kingdom, HRH Abdulrasaq Ojeifo, said it would be suicidal for any person to say he is king in Benin Kingdom.

    Ojeifo stated that it was a criminal act for anybody to declare himself king when the only recognized king is the Oba of Benin.

    He warned that the situation might degenerate to chaos and violence in the country if not well tackled.

    “We all know the history of Benin Kingdom. All of us both in Delta, Bayelsa have our roots in this Oba’s Palace. If you allow it to happen now, who knows where it will happen next. The title of Pere is not recognized by law.”

  • How far can Oba of Benin’s alternative dispute resolution drive go?

    How far can Oba of Benin’s alternative dispute resolution drive go?

    Shortly after he was crowned the Oba of Benin, Oba Ewuare II began settling of dispute between individuals and communities in an open mediation at the Ugha-Ozolua otherwise known as ‘native court’.  The open mediation was part of the many reforms he introduced to ensure justice and fair play.

    The Oba opted to preside over the open mediation because he was not happy that a parlance in Bini, ‘Egua emwen se’ meaning all matters end with the palace judgment was flouted as people still head to court in matters already resolved by the palace. The people’s belief in the palace judgment and decision was based on its being unbiased and fair to all. But for many years in Benin Kingdom, justice was sold to the highest bidder. Some palace chiefs that were supposed to be unbiased turned judgments on its head and made many fake pronouncements in the name of the Oba. Some cases brought to the palace never get the Oba’s attention. Many individuals lost landed properties and as such the people lost faith in getting justice from the palace.

    To ensure smooth dispensation of justice, Oba Ewaure II dissolved all ad hoc committees on arbitrations and set up a customary arbitrations centre on traditional matters to resolve conflicts. The center was to help fast track justice on traditional matters as well as unburdening some cases which need deeper traditional investigation for easy settlement. Every Tuesday was set aside to hear petitions from women while Thursdays was to hear disputes from different communities. Within few weeks when the native court began sitting, thousands of petitions have flooded the palace from individuals and communities across the kingdom. Before hearing of matters began, both parties are required to agree that they would not head for the court of law if the case are decided otherwise.

    Successes recorded by the open mediation made Oba Ewuare II proclaimed the Benin Customary Alternative Dispute Resolution Committee (BCADRC) headed by a retired Justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Samson Uwaifo.

    Other members of the committee are Prof. Gregory Akenzua, Chief Edionwere Oliha (the Oliha of Benin), Justice Samuel Elaiho (retired Justice of Edo State High Court), Justice Joseph Olubor (retired President, Customary Court), Mr. Daniel Inneh, Chief Abel Ehiogie and Surveyor James Amadin Osazuwa.

    Inaugurating the committee, Oba Ewuare II said the committee was to arbitrate, to mediate and resolve disputes among individuals and communities that voluntarily brings cases to them.

    Oba Ewuare II said he set up the committee because the people lost confidence in previous ad hoc committees used by the palace to settle disputes. He stated the the present eight members of the Committee would be expanded to 12, and divided into two groups with five members each and two floating members.

    According to him, “What our people need when disputation are brought to the palace for intervention, resolution and settlement is very simple. They want justice which recognises what our tradition and culture say on the subject matter that brought them. They want public welfare and their happiness protected. They want our tradition and property inheritance system protected from miscreants as well as the rich and powerful who would want to overrule others and treat them as conquered vassels.

    “The palace will continue to act as a steam in their conscience and protect the weak when they themselves are on the right side of the law and right side of God almighty.

    “It is hoped that this body will be expanded into two in due course. They are men of honour and integrity. They are versely knowledgeable in Benin Native Laws and Tradition. We may wish to add that in the event of anyone or group is not satisfied with the decision of the committee, a window does exist for request to be placed before me for a revaluation of the merit of such cases.”

    Justice Uwaifo noted that the Oba has introduced some organised measures of procedures to enhance confidence in alternative dispute resolution while at the same time ensuring that ‘it shall be informal, free from legal technicalities, speedy, simple and open in order to attain an early disposal of disputes with fairness and justice.’

    He stated that the inauguration of the committee has heralded a new dawn dispute resolution in Benin Kingdom.

    On the part of the AIG Zone 5, Muhammed Abubakar Adamu, he assured the palace of the support of the police in ensuring sucess of the committee.

    He said the development would assist Benin communities as well as the police, as most cases brought before the police are supposed to be dealt with by traditional institutions.

    But  Dele Igbinedion said the alternative dispute committee as set up by the Oba has no legal backing. He noted that anybody not satisfied  before a judgement is passed by the community could back out without any consequences.

    His words, “If you look at the Traditional Ruler and Chiefs law which is operational and governs activities of traditional rulers and chiefs, no power is given to anybody or any traditional council to set up alternative dispute resolution body. Anything that is done without legal powers is ultra vires.

    “We have in Edo State the Multi Door Court house backed up by relevant legislation. Besides that any other resolution that is being done by any person without legal backing is null and void. If people willingly submit themselves to the palace to look into their dispute, that is customary arbitration. It is not compulsory, it is voluntary but once a judgement is passed, it becomes binding. Before a judgment is passed, anybody who is not satisfied can opt out without any consequence.

    “I will say that we have moved beyond the system of judgment by the whims and caprices of individuals. What we look towards now is judgment that is recorded in law books that can be used as precedent. That is what the law recognises not the one by a conglomerate of people subject to their whims and no right of appeal. That is unacceptable.”

    What the people look forward to is how the committee will fare in the coming days if truly they will get justice.

  • Oba Ewuare II: Towards Benin renaissance

    Tomorrow October 20, it will exactly be one year that Omo n’ Oba n’ Edo, UKU AKPOLOKPOLO,  Ewuare the Second, Oba of Benin, ascended the majestic throne of his forefathers. October 20, 2016 was a day the stars stood still for yet another great Oba of Benin as he assumed his responsibilities as the monarch of the Great Benin Kingdom. It was a day a new peace, a new Benin nationalism and a new Benin ancestry was born.

    I have watched the Oba, listened to him and admired his majestic finesse which he exuded in the last one year, and I am basking in the euphoria that the Benin nation is once again flourishing with a 21st century monarch who is equipped with the intellectual depth, moral high grounds and spiritual dexterity to lead the modern Benin people to greater heights. Oba Ewaure II, on assuming powers on that fateful day, gave a roadmap of where he is leading the modern Benin person to. His maiden speech brilliantly articulated the prospects and challenges of the Benin people in particular, and Nigeria in general. He talked about his plans to restore the glory of the old Great Benin, touching on the economy, administration, cultural revival and restoration of the Edo language, promotion of the ethics, values and morals of the Benin people which great historians of the Benin civilization gladly recorded in their various works. Oba Ewaure II comes to the throne with a great sense of the history of Benin. His grasp of the historical trajectory of the Benin people seemingly guided his sense of mission which was articulated in his coronation speech as he called for the development of the Gele Gele port, an ancient port with which Great Benin reached out to the world for trade and advanced international economic relations way back in the 15th century. Dr. Ekhaguosa Aisien, a retired consultant surgeon and an eminent authority on the Benin history in his recent work, entitled; Ughoton described the GeleGele port, which is adjacent to the Ughoton Beach on the banks of the Ovia River as the “window on the world” for old Benin for 400 years. The Benin scholar-doctor-historian sheds light on the pre-eminence of the Gele Gele port in Ughoton further: “And much of what old Benin was known for was propagated through Ughoton and her Beach. Then 120 years ago, this port, through which Benin interacted with the wider world, was destroyed, along with Benin City itself, during the Benin-British war. After the war the new victorious rulers of the land turned their backs on Ughoton and her beach, and inadvertently converted Benin artificially into a landlocked kingdom, a kingdom without any access to the sea”.

    Oba Ewaure II Knows very well that Benin is not a landlocked kingdom. The artificial landlocked status imposed on the Benins by the British was sustained in post-colonial Nigeria as one of the consequences of the forced integration of old Benin Kingdom into the modern Nigerian state by the British imperialists. Also, the majoritarian politics which drives the contested Nigerian federalism and its neo-colonial political economy is yet another reason for the abandonment of the Gele Gele port which is the oldest port in the West African sub region. It operated since the middle of the15th century. The politics of majoritariaism and its short-sighted leadership ensured the subjugation of other ports in the country while sustaining the Lagos port and ensuring its boom economy in international trade to the detriment of the Benin Gele Gele port and other ports in the Niger Delta region. Today, only the ports in Lagos flourish. This is at the expense of the Gele Gele port in Ughoton. It is time for ports in Warri, Koko, Port Harcourt, Benin and other parts in the Niger Delta to flourish. The monarch’s call’s as many well-meaning Nigerians have noted is not political. It is purely economic. Commerce and economic prosperity from international and domestic trades are the imperatives here. It sits at the apex of the logic to rebuild the economy of the Benins and Nigerians on a larger scale. The Gele Gele port will flourish afresh, open up the agro-based economy of Ughoton and environs and create the new industrial hub in Benin and Nigeria.

    The development of the Gele Gele port will open new frontiers for the prosperity of Benin and her neighbours in the much marginalized Niger Delta. This is crystal clear in the light of the centrality of trade in contemporary world economy. Trade, the engine of growth of the developed countries, looms large as the engine of growth for the developing economies. The prosperity of the European, American, Japanese, and recently the Chinese economies with other Asian tigers is a testimony to the fact that Benin, and indeed, Nigeria can reconnect to the world, and the mystery that made the Gele Gele port in Ughoton to flourish for over four centuries is very much alive. The Benins are on the threshold of history. And so, Oba Ewaure II has set the pace. He has made a clarion call. We must all respond to his call.

    An accomplished diplomat, administrator, humanist and lover of his people, Oba Ewaure II has in the last one year given us a roadmap on how Great Benin can recreate itself and re-enact the mystique surrounding Benin civilization which knowledgeable historians claimed is as old  as the creation of the world by Osanobua (Almighty God). The monarch has opened new vistas on a cultural renaissance as he mobilizes the Edo man and woman to return to the promotion of the Edo language and the beautiful culture of the Benin people. Edo n’ Imose!

    I listened to the monarch respond to welcome addresses of his subjects from the various Benin communities since he embarked on his appreciation tour of his kingdom;  I have seen the  Oba pray fervently for the progress, peace and development of his people in the communities he visited so far. I have watched the Oba passionately begging Osanobua and his ancestors to have mercy on his subjects. I came to the conclusion that there is a renaissance in Great Benin. The circle of Benin greatness is anew in the digital age with a digital-compliant Oba. The monarch’s zeal for good governance, development, justice, fair play, rule of law, maintenance of law and order is remarkable. No doubt, his background as a diplomat, indeed, as Ambassador Plenipotentiary to several countries including Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Angola, Italy and Albania, and his academic training in the United States and the United kingdom foreground his enviable prowess for decorum, equity, protocol, and of course, orderliness in line with the Kingdom’s cosmology and the heritage of inimitable and self-respecting Benin people.

    These values which separate the Benins from other tribes and ethnic groups are being eroded by the younger generation, perhaps, due to urbanization and migration leading to the mix-up in Benin land. But these values, as our Great Oba Ewuare II has demonstrated and instructed, must be restored. I salute you my king! Our land must be saved from the downside of globalization. And so, all Benin elites and mass of the people must join the ship of progress which the Great Oba Ewuare II has commissioned. We must re-conceptualize globalization, and fashion it to meet our local needs and common destiny. So, it is glocalization that can rescue from the “elephantine” fangs of globalization.

    It is a mark of the king’s flair for excellence in development and the upliftment of the lives of the people that he recently honoured the former governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, for his great works as governor of Edo State from 2008 to 2016. The reception of Comrade Adams Oshiomhole should send the message to all and sundry especially members of the political class that our Oba and the great people of Nigeria are in search of persons on the political space who can bring about socio-economic development and uplift the lives of the people. The Oba’s reception for the Comrade Adams Oshiomhole is a wake-up call to the political class in Edo State to return to the drawing board, put on their thinking caps and commit to the socio-economic transformation of Edo State

    . Omo n’ Oba n’ Edo, UKU AKPOLOKPOLO, Ewuare the Second, Oba of Benin has unveiled a new wave for good governance. We must answer this clarion call. Oba ghator, kpere, ise!

     

    • Honorable Obahiagbon is former chief of staff, Edo State Government, Government House, Benin City.
  • Ex-Supreme Court Justice heads Alternative Resolution Committee

    Ex-Supreme Court Justice heads Alternative Resolution Committee

    The Benin Monarch, Oba Ewuare II, has named a retired Justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Samson Uwaifo, as chairman of the  the Benin Customary Alternative Dispute Resolution Committee (BCADRC).

    Other members of the committee are Prof. Gregory Akenzua, Chief Edionwere Oliha (the Oliha of Benin), Justice Samuel Elaiho (retired Justice of Edo State High Court), Justice Joseph Olubor (retired President, Customary Court), Mr. Daniel Inneh, Chief Abel Ehiogie and Surveyor James Amadin Osazuwa.

    Inaugurating the committee, Oba Ewuare II said the committee was to arbitrate, to mediate and resolve disputes among individuals and communities that voluntarily brings cases to them.

    Oba Ewuare II said he set up the committee because the people lost confidence in previous ad hoc committees used by the palace to settle disputes.

    The Royal father said members of the Committee were carefully selected based on their past records and respected sons of Benin Kingdom who have proven themselves in their field of endeavor.

    He stated the the present eight members of the Committee would be expanded to 12, and divided into two groups with five members each and two floating members.

    “If anybody is not satisfied with the decision of the committee, a window does exist for such person to see me to mediate,” he assured.

    In his acceptance speech, Justice Uwaifo, said the inauguration of the committee has heralded a new dawn dispute resolution in Benin Kingdom.

    He assured that the committee would give fair hearing and justice to litigants, saying that the Committee will do their best to justify the confidence reposed in them by the Monarch.

    On the part of the AIG Zone 5, Muhammed Abubakar Adamu, he assured the palace of the support of the police in ensuring sucess of the committee.

    He said the development would assist Benin communities as well as the police, as most cases brought before the police are supposed to be dealt with by traditional institutions.

    On her part, the Chief Justice of the State, Justice Esther Ikpomwen, said the establishment of the Committee will save the judiciary of time that could have otherwise been duplicated on cases that could have been resolved.

     

  • Edo State: Revamping Traffic Management with a Touch of History

    Edo State: Revamping Traffic Management with a Touch of History

    When Europeans first arrived Benin City in pre-colonial times, they marvelled at the ingenuity of the city’s planners, who in designing the streets, roads, landscapes, and alleyways of the sprawling kingdom, developed a masterpiece that rivalled some of Europe’s best cities.

    The Guardian Newspaper of the United Kingdom, in a recent feature on the story of cities, wrote of Europeans’ perception of Benin City and called it the “Great City of Benin,” at a time when there was hardly any other place in Africa the Europeans acknowledged as a city.

    Indeed, they classified Benin City as “one of the most beautiful and best-planned cities in the world.”

    One of the defining features of the great city is its metropolitan nature, which often helps the mass of people, who are either settling, visiting or commuting through the city to other towns or city centres navigate it effortlessly.

    And so, from being the toast of all in those times due to its elegantly planned cities, Benin City, the heart of Edo State, has morphed, in the 21st century, into a sprawling hub for transportation. This has called for efficient traffic management that requires a coordinated action plan to ensure that the movement of people and goods are managed in such a way as to eliminate loss of man hours and other resources.

    When His Royal Majesty, Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, the Oba of Benin, inaugurated the revamped Edo State Traffic Control and Management Agency (EDSTMA), on August 31, in Benin City, it bore some historical undertones. It was almost a playback to how the best of hands were recruited into elite guards to guard the city walls.

    Just as the great Benin Monarch ably took on the task of inaugurating the initiative, so had the officers of the agency undergone a stringent selection process that started in May this year and culminated in the best hands being thrust with the mandate to oversee efficient traffic management in the state.

    Reminiscing on Benin City’s envious town-planning heritage, Oba Ewuare II, said “the city has always had a well-designed layout of roads; feeder roads, streets and lanes since pre-colonial times.” He observed that “over the years, the increase in vehicular movement coupled with bad roads and poor traffic management resulted in chaotic traffic situations, made worse by some motorists with a penchant for disregarding traffic rules.”

    The imperative for revamping the EDSTMA is in recognition of the central role Benin City plays as a nexus to different parts of the country. The state is also home to a number of notable transport companies, which grew from nurturing their businesses from Benin City. Hence, increased activities from these companies and the large haul of passengers put immense pressure on roads, leading to traffic congestion and the need for proper calibration and management.

    As with many traffic agencies, EDSTMA, when it was first introduced, came into force to control traffic, maintain decorum and curtail the excesses of drivers and other road users. But with time, many complained that the agency lost its way because of the antics of its officials, who were accused of harassing road users and hassling them for pecuniary gains. To change all that terrible narrative, the Governor Godwin Obaseki-led government decided to retool the agency for optimal performance, with the thinking that better results can come from a reformed institution.

    “The officials of EDSTMA must not see their appointments as an avenue for enriching themselves by accepting bribes from motorists who may want to undermine traffic rules. I am glad that the government deemed it appropriate to create a Public Complaints Department for the agency, where members of the public can lodge their complaints. It is hoped that such complaints will be addressed speedily,” the Benin Monarch cautioned.

    So, when it was time for the state governor to deliver his address at the re-launch of the traffic agency, he was quick to note the historic role the Oba of Benin was playing at the occasion, stressing that the monarch’s presence not only showed the support of the royal father for the agency’s reform, but was a sign of the cordial relationship the government enjoys with the Oba.

    In his speech, Governor Obaseki expressed his delight at the presence of the Oba of Benin, which he described as an official royal visit and an honour to his administration. He said the rebranding of EDSTMA became necessary considering the fact that the state serves as a transportation hub to the country with heavy vehicular traffic.

    “This re-branded EDSTMA is made up of trained men and women who are more civil, operate within the ambit of the law and citizens are to relate with them as such,” Obaseki said, assuring Edo people that, with the establishment of a Public Complaints Unit, they would not be exploited by officials of the traffic control agency.

    He commended the immediate past governor of the state, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, who had the foresight to create EDSTMA to manage vehicular traffic in the state. The Managing Director of EDTSMA, Oloriegbe Dennis Ade, said the agency would adopt unique and advanced strategies to overcome the challenges that they may face.

    What has happened so far

    The presence of the EDSTMA officials have not only brought sanity to roads in Edo State, it has provided jobs for the teeming youths in the state. Standing sentry at traffic hotspots in the state, officials of the agency have now brought a new sense of dread to those who hitherto broke traffic laws. Hence, areas that are traditionally chaotic have been given a new lease of life by the watchful eyes of traffic officers.

    People in the state have started feeling the impact of the change of guards. They are basking in the new lease of life that has greeted the ever-busy roads in Benin City and its environs. Many commuters are delighted at the new state of things. A bus driver at the New Benin area of the city, Mr. Eghosa Omoruyi, hailed the presence of EDSTMA officials, stating that the reformed agency would instil fear in “bus drivers who are always in the habit of disobeying traffic light. I hope to see changes with the new EDSTMA that was commissioned by our Royal Father, the Oba of Benin. I believe they will be different from the EDSTMA of old,” he said.

    Traders, who ply the roads, are also upbeat about the state of the roads. Abubakar Sahidu, who trades at the New Benin Market, said not only was the state government deserving of praise, but the reformed agency would make living and trading in Benin City a delight.

    Osagie is the Special Adviser to Governor Obaseki on Media and Communication Strategy

     

  • Sallah: Oba Ewuare urges Muslims to pray for nation’s unity

    Sallah: Oba Ewuare urges Muslims to pray for nation’s unity

    The Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, Oba of Benin,
    has urged Muslim faithful to use this period of Eid-el-Kabir to reflect on positive virtues and pray for continued peaceful coexistence of Nigeria.
    The Oba made this appeal in a statement signed by  his  Chief Press Secretary, Mr Desmond Agbama on Thursday  and made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Benin.
     The traditional ruler reminded Muslims on the importance of praying for the well-being of their leaders to enable them succeed.
    He said the Nigeria’s leaders needed good health, knowledge and wisdom to be able to rule well.

    “Muslims should also pray for the leaders to have understanding and the political will to lead the country on the path of progress, fairness, equity and justice,” the monarch said.

    The statement added that the royal father wished the Muslim faithful a successful celebration.