My case against Gov. Ajimobi, others, by Olubadan
IBADAN – The royal rumble in Ibadan, the capital of Oyo
State, which has been on for four months, is yet to abate as the city is
now being ruled traditionally from two seats of power. Since Governor
Abiola Ajimobi installed the new 21 kings on August 27, 2017, the
residence of the Olubadan, His Imperial Majesty, Oba Saliu Adetunji,
which is the palace of the Olubada, has ceased to be the meeting venue
for the city’s traditional institution.
Adetunji’s former high chiefs, who have now been promoted to
the status of full-fledged kings with beaded crowns, now meet at the
ancient Mapo Hall as the official venue for the meeting of the
Obas-in-Council. This is in line with the reviewed declaration.
Expectedly, the Olubadan and High Chief Rashidi Ladoja, who
are not comfortable with the review of the 1959 Olubadan Chieftaincy
Declaration, have since stayed away from the new meeting venue. Though
three meetings have been held by the new kings at Mapo, the third
meeting, held two Wednesdays ago, would be the first official meeting of
the council. And in the absence of the Olubadan at the meeting, his
second in command, His Royal Majesty, Oba Lekan Balogun, Otun Olubadan,
took charge.
A source told Sunday Vanguard that the Obas-in-Council is
now settled for business as its meeting will now be held every two weeks
and that in a situation when the Olubadan is not present, the Otun
Olubadan will preside.
The source said the Secretary of the council has been
replaced with a civil servant. Meanwhile, contrary to the impression
that the kings are without kingdoms or domains, Sunday Vanguard gathered
that they would be in charge of the 11 councils in Ibadan.
Olubadan in court
When the Olubadan found that his opposition to the
chieftaincy review in the Oyo state capital had been ignored, he took
the legal option. First on the list of defendants in the suit with
number I/1077/2017 is Governor Ajimobi. Others include the state
Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, and the Commissioner for
Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters. The case, according to one of
the counsel to Olubadan, Mr. Abiodun Abdu-Raheem, was filed on September
18, 2017.
Also, eight of the 11 members of the Olubadan-in-Council are
the fourth to the 11th defendants, while the 13 village heads, who were
installed as coronet wearing kings, are the 12th to the 24th
defendants.
Oba Adetunji wants the court to make four declarations and
five orders. He wants the court to declare that for there to be an
amendment to the 1959 Olubadan Chieftaincy Declaration, the chieftaincy
committee proposing such amendment must be composed of recognised chiefs
by virtue of provision of Section 5 (2) of the Chiefs Law of Oyo State
2000.
The monarch also prays the court to declare that for there
to be amendment to the declaration, there must be in existence a
chieftaincy committee set up in accordance with the provision of the
Chiefs Law of the state.
He is also challenging the governor that he lacks the power
and authority to confer on anybody or person, including the fourth to
the 24th defendants, the right to wear beaded-crown and coronet in
violation of the Chiefs Law Cap 28 Laws of Oyo State 2000.
The Olubadan is seeking the court to declare that the
elevation of the members of Olubadan-in-Council and the Baales to the
rank or level of an Oba and their installation as kings entitled to wear
beaded crowns and coronets by the governor without consultation with
the Oyo State Council of Obas and Chiefs was done in error and,
therefore, it is illegal, null and void under the Chiefs Law Cap 28 Laws
of Oyo State.
The monarch also prays the court to set aside the Gazettes
14 and 15 at Volume 42 of 23rd and 24th August, 2017, respectively made
by the governor, which confer on the 4th to 24th defendants the right to
wear beaded crowns and coronets, same being in breach, violation and in
conflict with the provisions of the Chiefs Law Cap 28 Law of Oyo State
2000.
Oba Adetunji also asks the court to set aside the
installation of the new kings, an order of perpetual injunction
restraining all the new kings from wearing beaded crowns or coronets and
from parading themselves as beaded crown or coronet wearing Obas in
Ibadanland.
Also among the prayers of the king is a prayer that the
court should grant him an order of perpetual injunction that will
restrain Ajimobi, by himself or by any of his officials, servants or
agents acting pursuant to his instructions, from initiating any process
or taking any step towards intimidating, harassing, threatening,
suspending, removing, deposing or taking any action whatsoever
detrimental to the Olubadan personally or to his office as the Olubadan
of Ibadanland, more particularly with respect to the crisis caused by
the purported amendment to the declaration as contained in the gazette.
‘Provocative statements’
In defence of Ajimobi, the ruling All Progressives Congress
(APC) in the state said it preferred the legal option taken by the
monarch to seek redress instead of what it described as provocative and
inciting comments emanating from the media team of the Olubadan.
The party exonerated the monarch from the statements, saying
his gentle nature negated the statements by his Media Director, Mr.
Adeola Oloko.
The Oyo APC, through its Director of Media, Research and
Strategy, Dr AbdulAzeez Olatunde, noted that it was commendable that the
royal father had finally remembered that justice could only come from
the court of law and not through rude, insulting, provocative and
inflammatory statements by media aides.
Monarch’s ‘multiple tax free payments’
Olatunde said that contrary to the insinuation from the
palace that the Olubadan’s allowances had not been paid for six months,
the party was alarmed to discover that his allowances and those of other
members of the Local Government Traditional Council and the Oyo State
Council of Traditional Rulers had been paid up to date by the 11 local
governments in Ibadan on one hand and the state government on the other
in line with the payment status of everyone on the payroll of both
tiers of government.
The APC chief noted that Adetunji’s allowances were not
treated in isolation but alongside those of other traditional rulers in
Oyo as well as everyone on the payroll.
He stressed that when salaries were delayed, it was not only
the Olubadan that was affected, decrying the “malicious attempt to
portray the Oyo State Government as singling out the monarch for
victimization”.
He said “Our father, the Olubadan, receives multiple tax
free payments from all the eleven local governments in Ibadan land. For
instance, he has collected up till August 2017 from Ibadan South East LG
, Ido LG, Ibadan South West LG, Ibadan North L;G, Oluyole LG and Ibadan
North East while Lagelu LG has paid up to July 2017. Egbeda and Ona
Ara LGs have paid up to June 2017. Only Akinyele LG is behind in meeting
its financial obligations and it is not peculiar to the Olubadan but to
the generality of its payroll.
“Contrary to the six months outstanding being peddled, the
state government has paid all the monarchs in the state up to June 2017
from the appropriated fund of the approved budget and that is the same
month which workers in the state have been paid up to. Kabiyesi still
collects his honorarium for any event he attends just like the recently
held APC organised Public Sitting on True Federalism. These details were
sourced from the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters
through the Director in charge, Mr. Zaccheus Jaiyeola. We challenge Mr.
Oloko (Adetunji’s spokesperson) to produce documentary evidence that the
state governor has stopped the payment of the Olubadan’s allowances.
“We in the APC hold and respect our royal fathers in the
state. We accord them their due respect and we will continue to support
them. We however appeal to them to separate politics from communal
development as well as chieftaincy matters”.
Will Ibadan traditional institution ever be one again?
Many residents of Ibadan, especially the indigenes, are of
the belief that the bitterness the new dispensation has generated among
the traditional rulers in the city will take time to be healed. If the
court rules in favour of the Olubadan or the defendants, many people
think the cord of oneness which had hitherto bound the traditional
institution together will remain broken for several years to come.
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