Tag: Olubadan

  • Ajimobi commiserates with Olubadan over wife’s death

    Ajimobi commiserates with Olubadan over wife’s death

    Gov. Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State has commiserated with the Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Saliu Adetunji on the death of his senior wife, Olori Kudirat Adetunji.

    The governor said this in a statement signed by his Special Adviser on Communication and Strategy, Mr Yomi Layinka, and made available to newsmen in Ibadan on Thursday.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Olori died in the early hours of Thursday at the age of 71.

    Ajimobi described the demise of the monarch’s wife as unfortunate and disheartening, saying he received the sad news with shock and disbelief.

    The governor described the incident as a big loss to the Olubadan and entire people of the ancient city.

    “I am greatly saddened by the passing away of Olori Kudirat. It is very unfortunate and disheartening.\

    Read Also: Olubadan loses senior wife

    “We were together with Kabiyesi and the royal retinue at the Chief of Army Staff conference, held in Ibadan last week.

    “Her death is indeed a big loss to our father, the Olubadan and the people of Ibadanland.

    ‘‘May the Almighty grant Kabiyesi, children and loved ones the fortitude to bear the loss,’’ the governor said.

    He enjoined the people of Oyo State to pray for the repose of the deceased’s gentle soul and may Allah grant her the highest place in Jannah Firdaus.

    NAN recalled that Mr Adeola Oloko, the Monarch’s Director of Media and Public Affairs, had earlier on Thursday announced Kudirat’s death.

    Oloko stated that Kudirat, the late Iyaloja of Bolade in Oshodi, Lagos State, would be buried at the Popoyemoja Palace of the Olubadan by 4 p.m.

    NAN also reports that the deceased was survived by her husband, children and grand-children.

  • Mogajis warn 21 new obas for threatening  Olubadan

    Mogajis warn 21 new obas for threatening Olubadan

    Ibadan Authentic Mogajis (family heads) have told the city’s 21 new obas to withdraw their 21-day dethronement threat against the Olubadan, Oba Saliu Adetunji.

    They issued a seven-day ultimatum against the new obas to withdraw their threat against the Imperial Majesty or be sanctioned for their disloyalty to the frontline monarch.

    The new obas had issued a 21-day ultimatum to Oba Adetunji to abide by the Olubadan Chieftaincy Declaration law review or face dethronement.

    The mogajis advised the new obas to immediately withdraw their ultimatum or face the wrath of Ibadan sons and daughters.

    According to them, the new obas risk losing their crowns should they recommend the Olubadan for removal because of what they called “phantom charges” against His Imperial Majesty.

    The mogajis, after their meeting at the Oja’ba palace, which was reportedly attended by Alhaji Abass Oloko (Mogaji Oloko), Chief Abduljelyl Karheem (Mogaji Adanla), Alhaji Moshud Gbolagade (Mogaji Akere), Alhaji Waheed Kosoko (Mogaji Onilabu), Alhaji Ademola Oladosu (Mogaji Olasomi) and Chief Wale Oladoja (Mogaji Akinsola), said they would not allow the city to disintegrate.

    A statement yesterday in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, by their spokesman Wale Oladoja, said: “We can’t continue to fold our arms and watch while some people rain abuses and insults on our revered kabiyesi. It is a big slap on the real Ibadan sons and daughters and we have decided to appeal to the eight high chiefs to withdraw their statement within the next seven days or face the consequences of their disloyalty to the Olubadan, who, by law and tradition of the city, remains the paramount ruler of the land.

    “These eight high chiefs are members of the Olubadan-in-Council and they should stop parading themselves as constitutional obas in Ibadan; failure to do so may lead to anarchy. We know quite alright that the government of President Muhammadu Buhari will not tolerate anything that will jeopardise the security of any part of the country and the governor, as the Chief Security Officer of the state, should caution all these-so-called vassal obas. They should allow court to decide the cases on merit and stop cutting corners.

    “We, the authentic mogajis, begin to wonder if these people are already feeling guilty before the court pronouncements. Why should anybody not allow the status quo to remain pending the judgment of several cases on the matter?

    “We hold dear the Nigerian Judiciary as bastion and hope of all. Therefore, they should allow the Judiciary to do its job. Otherwise, we will go after them and subject them to public ridicule too.

    “They are our fathers and they should know that an injury to one is an injury to all. They risk losing their crowns should they go ahead to recommend the Olubadan for removal over phantom charges.”

     

  • You can’t remove me, Olubadan tells obas

    You can’t remove me, Olubadan tells obas

    The Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Saliu Akanmu Adetunji, Aje Ogungunniso I, yesterday said the purported threat of 21 Ibadan kings to recommend him for removal is an affront to indigenes.

    The monarch described the 21 kings as entertainers of the year, even as he said they  lacked the powers to unseat him.

    A statement yesterday in Ibadan, Oyo State capital, by the Director of Media and Public Affairs to the Olubadan, Mr Adeola Oloko, said the Oba-in-Council was unknown to Oyo State Chieftaincy Laws.

    It wondered how a group of educated individuals, as the embattled obas, could resort to what it called an illegality by commenting on a matter already in court.

    Hearing continues tomorrow at the Oyo State High Court in Ibadan in a suit filed by the Olubadan against the government on the controversial chieftaincy review.

    Oba Adetunji, who has pleaded with the court to take judicious notice of the defendants’ persistent contempt of court in the matter, averred that if a scapegoat is not made of at least one or two culprits, there will be no end to the offence.

    On the issue by the Oba-in-Council, the Olubadan said the council, comprising high chiefs and Olubadan only, is only an advisory body with no force of law, customs and traditions backing it.

    The statement said: “In the same vein, the baales, who the embattled high chiefs have added to themselves to become 21, are not members of Olubadan-in-Council and, therefore, should not be dressed in borrowed robe as they have no power whatsoever over their lord.”

    According to Oba Adetunji, as the prescribed and appointing authority, he can promote and/or peg the promotion of a high chief.

    But the Olubadan said he did not contemplate any such decision as he did not see himself as an absolute monarch.

    He said there was no time the embattled high chiefs were barred from attending palace activities, adding that they shunned palace invitations in their alleged desperate rush for multiple crowns and cheap royalty.

    Oba Adetunji expressed delight that despite their absence from palace activities, he had been exercising his duties without let or hindrance.

    The Olubadan said even when the obas were being harassed and molested in the streets and called unprintable names, he tried to calm frayed nerves to guarantee their safety and security by going to court to quell tension.

    He added that as the Yoruba proverb says the okra can never outgrow its reaper, a high chief cannot outgrow the king by threatening to recommend his removal.

    Oba Adetunji said: “By custom and tradition, no Olubadan has been recommended for removal from office by any high chief or group of high chiefs at any time. My own reign will not be an exception. At least, we have received applications from families of about four of the embattled high chiefs, asking for their immediate replacement.

    “But, like a prodigal son, we hope that they would sooner than later renounce the unrecognised crowns and return to the warm embrace of their father as the palace door is perpetually open.

    “The high chiefs are hereby advised to emulate high chiefs in other places, who are not wearing crowns but still earn respect of their people for peace and progress to reign supreme in the land.”

     

  • Olubadan gets  21-day deadline

    Olubadan gets 21-day deadline

    •No-confidence vote threat

    Members of the Ibadan Council of Obas yesterday issued a 21-day ultimatum to the Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Saliu Adetunji, to reconcile his activities with the provisions of the Olubadan Chieftaincy Review or face vote of no confidence from them.

    They addressed reporters at the historic Mapo Hall in Ibadan, the state capital.

    The most senior monarch to the Olubadan, Oba Lekan Balogun, who spoke for the others accused Oba Adetunji of flouting the provisions of the chieftaincy law by taking unilateral decisions and allegedly promoting civil disorder.

    They said the Olubadan’s wives were embarrassing the palace through their excesses and alleged misleading the monarch on many issues.

    The council members also accused the Olubadan of inciting people against Governor Abiola Ajimobi, who undertook the review, which made him an Imperial Majesty.

    They recalled that the August 2017 review of the Chieftaincy Declaration by the state government was a response to several petitions and agitation for reform by members of the defunct Olubadan-In-Council.

    According to them, Ibadan indigenes should rather be grateful to Ajimobi for accenting to their request.

    The monarchs said they wrote to Oba Adetunji in July, 2016, to lodge complaints about him, copies of which were sent to the governor and the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters.

    They added that members of the Ibadan Elders Forum waded in and resolved the crisis at the time.

    Oba Adetunji was enthroned in February, 2016.

    Emphasising their grouses against the Olubadan, the obas said: “Meetings of the Olubadan-In-Council were not conducted properly as they had been done. Oloris (queens) were still attending meetings with us and contributing, dictating and attacking high chiefs in curses and abuses.

    “Appointment of baales and mogajis are not in compliance with the proper set-up rules and standards. Apart from monetary scandal of which Kabiyesi is yet to refrain, a new Olubadan-In-Council is inside Popoyemoja palace, consisting of the Olubadan, the oloris and the Personal Assistant to the Kabiyesi (Tairu), who decide from time to time who is to be baale or mogaji and will only send hearing notice of meeting and agenda to the real members of the Olubadan-In-Council on the Saturday preceding the installation date on Monday. This leaves no time for protest, and any attempt to protest on Monday is fruitless, as Kabiyesi believed that he is not challengeable.”

    The monarchs also accused Oba Adetunji of acting alone in traditional functions.

    They said he sent clerks and personal assistants with the staff of authority or attended occasions singularly the or with his wives.

    The council said many litigations were ongoing over the installations of mogajis and baales because they were unilaterally and wrongly done.

    Some examples they cited are: the Baale Ajogbobi, Mogaji Kosoko/Onilabu, Baale Badeku and Mogaji Oyelakun.

    Highlighting the merits of the recent review, the monarchs noted that the Olubadan, who was until then His Royal Majesty, could only install baales and mogajis.

    The obas said the review elevated him to His Imperial Majesty, giving the Olubadan the right to enthrone other obas.

    They recalled that the first major review of the declaration was undertaken in 1976 when the late Oba Gbadamosi Adebimpe was elevated to His Royal Majesty, becoming the first Ibadan oba to wear beaded crown.

    The monarchs said this year’s review would not be the last as Ibadan indigenes sought better ways to bring development to Ibadan.

    They also accused the Olubadan of wanting to be the only monarch in Ibadan metropolis, a city they reiterated is the largest in West Africa.

    The obas said as members of the council, which nominated the Olubadan, they could pass a vote of no confidence on him, thereby preparing the ground for deposition, if the monarch remained recalcitrant.

    They said: “We are, by this conference, giving His Imperial Majesty a 21-day ultimatum to change his stand and work for the improvement of Ibadan, rather than promoting disorderliness. Failure to do so, the entire Ibadan Council of Obas will pass a vote of no confidence in the Imperial Majesty, Oba Saliu Adetunji, and declare him persona non-grata, and the government will have no other choice than to move for appropriate action.

    “You need to know that we the then Olubadan-In-Council nominated and appointed him and presented the said Kabiyesi Adetunji to the government of Oyo State for inauguration and approval or confirmation as the Olubadan of Ibadan, knowing well that under the law, anybody from the position of Ekerin is qualified for the position of the Olubadan.

    “The obaship of the Olubadan did not start from Oba Saliu and it will not end in his palace…”

    At the briefing were Oba Owolabi Olakulehin, Oba Tajudeen Ajibola, Oba Eddy Oyewole, Oba Lateef Gbadamosi Adebimpe, Oba Amidu Ajibade and Oba Kola Adegbola.

    Contacted, the Director of Media and Publicity to the Olubadan, Mr Adeola Oloko, said the palace would react at the appropriate time.

  • Olubadan: chieftaincy law review reversible

    Olubadan: chieftaincy law review reversible

    The Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Saliu Akanmu Adetunji, Aje Ogungunniso I, has said the chieftaincy reform in which the Oyo State government enthroned 21 kings is reversible.

    Governor Abiola Ajimobi, at last Friday’s Eid-el-Mawlud celebration at the Remembrance Arcade at Agodi in Ibadan, the capital, reportedly said there was no going back on the reform.

    A statement yesterday by the monarch’s Director of Media and Public Affairs, Mr Adeola Oloko, quoted Oba Adetunji:  “There is nothing irreversible under the sun”.

    Receiving hundreds of baales (family compound leaders) from Idi Arere, Popoyemoja, Isale Osi, Igbonna, Akuro, Gbodu, Bode and adjoining areas at the weekend, Oba Adetunji noted that he has lived long enough to know that God can reverse the irreversible and return Ibadan chieftaincy system to the path of peace and harmony.

    The frontline monarch noted that the legal tussle over the controversial law between the state and diverse stakeholders in Ibadan is alive.

    According to him, all parties to the dispute should respect the rule of law by giving the court the chance to play its constitutional role of adjudicating in disputes without let or hindrance.

    The statement said: “Some people erroneously believe that the chieftaincy crisis is a personal conflict between Governor Ajimobi and Oba Adetunji. This is wrong. There are at least five suits in respect of the chieftaincy crisis in the Oyo State High Court as we speak. What this shows is that the generality of our people believe that the issue at stake is a matter of great public interest as well as the outcome.”

    “As the Olubadan, I am merely a custodian of the tradition and customs of Ibadan people. With an oath before our forebears, I do not see how as a monarch I will compromise the tradition and custom of Ibadan people.”

  • Olubadan installs Shittu as Agbaakin Fiwajoye

    Olubadan installs Shittu as Agbaakin Fiwajoye

    Amidst tight security, the Olubadan of Ibadan Oba Saliu Adetunji yesterday installed Minister of Communication, Barrister Adebayo Shittu as Agbaakin Fiwajoye of Ibadanland at his Popoyemoja palace, Ibadan.

    There had been apprehensions since news of the installation hit town.

    True to their threats, the 21 new Obas were conspicuously absent at the event.

    There was heavy security at the palace vicinity while guest were only allowed in after thorough checks.

    Plain- clothed detectives, armed police, the state anti- crime patrol teams, members of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps were all positioned at strategic positions to ensure law and other

    Several family members, friends and political associates of the Saki-born politician honoured him with their presence.

    Shittu, who arrived Olubadan palace in the company of his wife and family members in a Black Toyota Land cruiser, was ushered into the palace to pay home to Chiefs before the installation ceremony.

    After being decorated with the Akoko leave and traditional bead with in pendant with the inscription “Agbaakin Fiwajoye of Ibadanland”, the minister, who was claded in his blue traditional agbada, expressed appreciation to the Olubadan for the honour bestowed on him.

    The Osi Olubadan, High Chief Rashidi Ladoja who spoke on behalf of Olubadan, congratulated the newly installed chief.

    He noted the Minister has become a honourary chief to the prestigious Olubadan stool.

    Speaking with newsmen at the Jogor Centre where guests were entertained,Chief Shittu said the honour done on him by the Olubadan is an icing on the cake to his undying love and commitment to Ibadan as a town.

     

  • Ibadan 21 obas: Olubadan ‘ll reconcile with Ajimobi, says Oluwo

    Ibadan 21 obas: Olubadan ‘ll reconcile with Ajimobi, says Oluwo

    The Oluwo of Iwo in Oyo State, Oba Abdurasheed Akanbi, has said the rift between Governor Abiola Ajimobi and the Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Saliu Adetunji will soon be resolved.

    The governor and the frontline monarch have been at loggerheads over government’s review of the 1959 Olubadan Chieftaincy law.

    The review resulted in the promotion of the members of the Olubadan-in-Council and 21 baales (village heads) to beaded crown-wearing obas (kings).

    Oba Akanbi spoke in Ibadan, the state capital, after a meeting with Ajimobi.

    The monarch said the Olubadan would soon align with the governor on the intents behind the Olubadan Declaration review.

    The Oluwo had visited Oba Adetunji at his Popoyemoja palace on September 10.

    The Olubadan, in a suit filed at the State High Court in Ibadan, sued Ajimobi, the Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters, the Attorney General and Commissioner of Justice and the 21 newly crowned obas over the amendment of the 1959 Olubadan Chieftaincy Declaration and subsequent coronation of the obas on August 27.

    Speaking at Governor’s office after the meeting, Oba Akanbi said the progress on resolving the impasse showed Ajimobi’s commitment not to use his constitutional executive power on the matter.

    The monarch also said his pronouncements that the Olubadan remained his father, coupled with the respect the two parties have shown each other indicated that the rift would soon be settled.

    He added that Ajimobi had shown respect for the traditional institution, the desire for peace and progress of Ibadan with similar commitment to peace in his conversation with the Olubadan.

    Oba Akanbi said: “I came to thank the governor for being peaceful, despite the impasse with the Olubadan. I have spoken with Baba, the Olubadan, previously, as well as last night. I have come to do same with the governor.

    “This is because Iwo is the closest town to Ibadan, and the Oluwo is the closest first-class monarch to the Olubadan. So, what concerns Ibadan should concern Iwo. We have come to look for a way to resolve the issue. The governor has stayed with the peaceful side to resolve the issue. That is a good move.

    “The governor respects the traditional institution a lot and he respects the Olubadan a lot. The governor has the law and executive order; he keeps referring to the Olubadan as his father.

    “Definitely, the Olubadan will come to terms with the governor. We are working towards that. That is why I came here from Iwo, for peace. The governor has demonstrated that.”

  • 2019: I prefer being Olubadan to governor

    2019: I prefer being Olubadan to governor

    A former governor of Oyo State, High Chief Rashidi Ladoja, has disclosed that he would not contest the 2019 governorship election in the state. Ladoja, who  rejoined the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), disclosed this while speaking on an Ibadan-based radio station, Fresh FM, yesterday. He explained that he had personal reasons for not joining the next governorship race.

    According to him, he was inching closer to the the throne of the Olubadan, a position he desires to occupy if God permits. He is currently the Osi Olubadan of Ibadan land. Ladoja said he has other reasons to leave the stage for others because he has done enough in Oyo politics. The former governor said he took the decision in 2015 but that his former party, Accord, forced him to join the race because of his goodwill and popularity.

    Ladoja, who was emphatic about his decision, said he has had enough of the governorship race, pointing out that it was part of the reasons he joined the national chairmanship race of the PDP. He said that he would not have joined the chairmanship race if he still intended to contest for the governorship in 2019.

    Ladoja was the governor of the state from 2003 to 2007 under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). He joined the Accord Party in 2010 and contested under his new party in 2011 and 2015. He lost to the incumbent governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi, in the two elections. But he insisted that he won the last election, stressing that he lost at the tribunal only on technical grounds.

    Ladoja explained that his main agenda for seeking to be PDP’s national chairman is to right the wrongs of the past by creating a level-playing ground for all aspirants for all positions in elections across Nigeria. “I was a victim of that. I am contesting to ensure that no other party member falls victim of that. I will instill confidence in everybody by ensuring there is a level-playing ground for every party member in all parts of Nigeria,” he said

    Ladoja said the All Progressives Congress (APC) would not have won the last presidential election if the PDP embraced internal democracy. He explained that the PDP governors who joined the APC did so because of lack of internal democracy. He also denied claims by his former deputy, Adebayo Alao-Akala, that he (Ladoja) won the governorship election only at the time they worked together. Ladoja said he won because of his large following.

  • Alaafin, Olubadan, others for Oduyoye birthday lecture

    The Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi III; Olubadan of Ibadan Oba Saliu Adetunji; Afenifere leader Chief Ayo Adebanjo, and former House of Representatives Speaker Dimeji Bankole, among others, are among eminent Nigerians expected tomorrow at the fifth Babatunde Oduyoye birthday lecture.

    The lecture, an annual colloquium on topical national issues regarding the development and growth of Nigeria, will hold at the Banquet Hall of Premier Hotel in Ibadan, Oyo State capital, at 11 am.

    The lecture, with the theme: Imperatives of Nigeria’s Survival and Development, will be delivered by a political scientist and director at the University of Ibadan (UI) Centre for Distance Learning, Prof Bayo Okunade.

    The university’s Chairman of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Dr Deji Omole, and former Special Adviser on Media to Enugu and Oyo states’ governors, Dr Festus Adedayo, are discussants.

    Pa Adebanjo will chair the event, while Bankole will be special guest of honour.

    The Alaafin of Oyo and the Olubadan of Ibadan will be the royal father of the day and host royal father of the day.

     

     

  • Ajimobi, Olubadan, Buhari and South-West APC

    After a fairly consistent period of reading a particular newspaper columnist, you naturally begin to understand and even anticipate the form and content of his/her writings, the issues that motivate the columns, the overall style, language and analytical tools typically deployed in those interventions. Having started on a wide and rich diet of very distinguished columnists assembled on the editorial pages of The Nation newspapers, I soon gravitated towards a few columnists and settled with them almost on a ritual basis: Palladium  by Idowu Akinlotan happens to be one of them.

    Notwithstanding my admiration for the many fascinating skills of this columnist, I have had several occasions to completely disagree with both the form and content of some of his columns. For instance, I am usually very miffed at his ingratiating lack of restraint especially when talking about senior public citizens; his seemingly accustomed tendentiousness; his unrelieved sense of magisterial authority to declaim on any and everything and; the occasionally blatant and unpardonable partisanship of some of his interventions (Kogi State and its recent governorship elections is a prime example).

    His column of Sunday October 15, 2017 under the topic ‘Ajimobi, Olubadan, Buhari and Southwest APC” is the immediate trigger of this rejoinder. My concern will however be strictly limited to his references to Ajimobi and Olubadan while Buhari and SouthWest APC will preferably be left out of the scope of my interest for reasons that should soon be obvious.

    While Mr Akinlotan may be tolerated, even welcome,  to his typically indecorous, gratuitous and hasty characterization of a whole group of elected leaders as ‘third rate’ people with ‘demonstrable lack of assiduity in projects conception and implementation’, he should not be allowed to get away with the very rude description of Governor Abiola Ajimobi’s media briefing after his recent meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari  as illogical with such insouciant verbiage thrown in to describe the governor as a man that is ‘imperceptible’, and  whose “sense of history may be a little troubling’.

    How much more illogical and uncouth can you get when you use such words and phrases for a man who was the elected Governor and symbol of millions of people? This haul of insults is to a man who stated quite early and clearly that the whole matter of the Olubadan came up with the president only because of its security, and even political, implications for the State.

    Periodic intimation of goings-on in states is a normal routine, especially between governors and the President, particularly when they belong to the same political parties. Just a few days ago, the Governor of Kogi State (whom our columnist dislikes with a passion!) was seen in Aso Rock, and in fact spoke with reporters and was thereafter quoted as saying he came to brief the president about some critical issues that he thinks the President ought to know about his state. Few days afterwards, a delegation of about eight governors including Emmanuel, Bagudu, Abubakar, Akeredolu and Ahmed were led into a meeting with the President by Governor Abdul’Aziz Yari under the auspices of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum.  So, whether in groups or as individuals, governors have always visited the President either to brief, hold meetings or simply to pay courtesy calls. One is therefore bemused that the author of Paladdium and others like him consider Ajimobi’s visit any special and deserving of his acerbic comments.

    Briefing the president on the Olubadan chieftaincy review basically arose out of the need to acknowledge that while some dust had ben raised in certain quarters ostensibly in civil opposition, the real truth and present danger was that the whole process had been hijacked by a chieftain of an opposition political party and his group with grave security implications.

    Unknown to some, including our columnist, this group had surreptitiously converted the Olubadan’s palace not only into its operational headquarters but as a staging post from where it had started to deploy its political missiles and weapons of mass deception. Recall that a few weeks ago, some hoodlums were said to have made a dramatic appearance at the Olubadan’s palace during a chieftaincy ceremony. They were said to have been seen shooting sporadically at some guests for more than fifteen minutes in the full glare of a contingent of security operatives after which they sped away without as much as anyone getting a picture of any of the marauders. We are hopeful that the security agencies will eventually unmask the real actors. In the meantime, there are those who would swear today that the event was not only a theatrical charade made to look real, but that its primary purpose was to blackmail the government by creating the impression that the mayhem was sponsored against the Palace and its opposition cohorts. How ridiculous! Thankfully, that ploy failed as most citizens refused to buy into the obvious humbug.

    The red herring failed to fly because most stakeholders are not only fully aware of how trenchant Ajimobi’s government had been about issues of security since he was sworn-in in 2011, they have indeed celebrated the restored calm as one of the best dividends of democracy they had ever been given since 1999. Conversely, they also know too well how sworn-to brigandage this particular Opposition leader has always been and how inseparable his group is with all things violent and unruly, as demonstrated during their reign of terror when Oyo State, particularly Ibadan, was infamously known as a garrison of mercenaries.

    Another inconvenient truth that is obviously lost to our columnist is that this group and its many agents had virtually succeeded in misguiding our revered monarch into public conduct unbecoming of his high esteem; these include but are not limited to the series of highly provocative and incendiary public statements emanating from the palace. Even when he could have explored all the usually open avenues for dialogue with the governor, the old man was – to the embarrassment of all men and women of goodwill – goaded into embarking on a public show of his disagreement with government by going round major streets and markets, openly campaigning, inciting and dividing the people against the government. Despite these many regrettable assaults on proper protocols, the Governor only returned the favour with a consistent demonstration of courtesies and reaffirmation of respect and loyalty to the monarch and his proud Ibadan heritage.

    When Akinlotan therefore asks the rather lame question: how many other governors have toed his line and reported their monarchs to the President, our short response can only be, ‘how many governors have the same kind of potential security breaches unwittingly exacerbated by their monarchs?’

    Perhaps the most egregious statement is when our author questions Ajimobi’s ‘understanding of the city’s proud history and heritage’ as if he is any competent to claim superior understanding. This is to a man who is not only a full-blooded Ibadan indigene but a thoroughbred with noble family roots that stretch back to the foundations of the city and connect to some of the most revered family trees in Ibadanland – from his father’s direct lineage and ancestry that goes back to the legendary Agboluaje-Ibadan to his mother’s equally illustrious ancestry that traces its heritage to Olugbode. Even in contemporary times, the Ajimobis occupy an enviable place among the pantheon of Ibadan greats. Well, I suppose that it is not unusual to occasionally encounter an immodest fellow who brazenly claims greater knowledge of the origins and meanings of a song than the one who actually composed and sang it!

    As to Akinlotan’s judgment that the review of the Olubadan Chieftaincy Declaration was carried out to weaken and threaten the obaship institution, we can only assume that he had not been following the many arguments in favour of the review by a variety of eminent scholars, prominent Ibadan indigenes as well as the overwhelming majority of the custodians of traditional institutions including the eight members of the nine-man Olubadan-in Council. If he had, he would have been sufficiently educated to know that there was no way the governor would have conceived of the notion, not to talk of the act, of executing any assault against his

    fatherland. Why would he plot an assault against an institution of which he is a major beneficiary having recently been honoured with the title of Aare of Ibadanland by this same monarch of whom he is very fond? Conversely, his actions in the regard are very strictly motivated and guided by a fervent desire to help guide the institution into modernity as we have seen across other major cities in Yorubaland.  Not only was the idea for the chieftaincy reforms the culmination of several decades of community-driven demands, all due processes were followed to ensure stakeholder participation as well as strict compliance with the rule of law and traditional protocols. Mr Akinlotan may wish to adequately enlighten himself by reading the public documents before and all through the proceedings of the Judicial Panel of Enquiry as well as the Government’s duly published white paper on it.

    It certainly begets mischief to suggest that a review that enjoyed such citywide applause threatens that institution just because of a few politically motivated and strident criticisms whose sole purpose was to exploit the circumstance to fight a proxy war with the hope of achieving visibility and relevance after their serial political losses on the electoral field. One would have thought a well-regarded columnist would be circumspect in joining such an army of political ‘arsonists’. But apparently, you never know how some contagion spreads.

    As promised, this riposte is not concerned with the many pseudo-intellectual pronouncements, innuendoes and suppositions against President Buhari and Southwest APC. All I can add here is that Ajimobi, like his colleagues in the region, has been working assiduously to champion the cause of the Yoruba nation within the context of the country’s emerging political matrix. He has also been a rallying point of APC governors in the South-West to strengthen the party and reposition it for greater chances in coming elections.

    As anyone who has ever been in or around government will tell, and unlike what armchair critics would say, it is not as easy to weld a people together towards the attainment of a crystalline vision, especially when beholden to the many centrifugal and peculiarly Nigerian forces that militate against the most enthusiastic and gifted of leaders. Standing out – looking in is a much more convenient sport than working in and battling through the murky labyrinths of conflicting interests and values. Only the deep can speak to the deep as our columnist would say.

    The fact that a state house reporter and his newspaper chose to exaggerate and distort the sequence of a story or use a headline that masks actual context does not excuse a presumably more knowledgeable columnist to follow their track. Why would any state governor board an aircraft for Abuja just to ‘report’ a monarch who ordinarily is answerable to one of the local government chairmen? It is not only unfathomable that any governor would do that, it is preposterous for anyone to think so.

     

    • Layinka is the Special Adviser, Communication & Strategy to Governor Abiola Ajimobi of Oyo State.