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Monday, 19 October 2015
Call Igbos to order, they cannot have kings in Yorubaland – Afenifere tells Governors, Obas
By Wale Odunsi
The Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) has called on
governors and monarchs in the South-West not to
recognise Igbo kings in their respective states and
domains.
A statement by its Publicity Secretary, Kunle Famoriyo,
said the concept of Igbo kings otherwise known as Eze
Ndigbo in Yorubaland was not backed by any
customary law.
The ARG was reacting to an altercation between the Deji
of Akure, Oba Kole Aladetoyinbo, and the Eze Ndigbo of
Akure, Gregory Iloehike, in Ondo State, last week which
led to protests and the closure of markets.
ARG noted that “The evolution of this structure has
forced us to consider it as an expansionist agenda as
the structure is only rampant in Yorubaland
“In Akure, the ‘Eze’ believes he now has the power to
confer people with chieftaincy titles that are traditional
to Yoruba kingship systems. In Lagos State, there is an
Eze Ndigbo of Lagos, as well as for each of the 57
councils. There are reports that we now even have Eze
Ndigbo of some neighbourhoods in Lagos.
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“What used to be were development unions and
associations of Igbo people living in Yorubaland. Almost
all Igbo communities with sizeable number of indigenes
living in Yorubaland have a development union or
association. These associations are welcome and
supported, being organisations set up to discuss the
welfare of their members.”
The ARG said the proliferation of the Eze Ndigbo could
cause a huge problem in the near future, warning Igbo
groups to stop testing the patience of the Yoruba.
Insisting that that a kingdom can never have two kings,
ARG lamented “the manner this idea of ‘Eze Ndigbo’
sprouted and started spreading connotes territorial
influence and even ownership.
“This practice has continued to stretch the tolerant
nature of the Yoruba people to the limit and it appears
the eventual aim of its perpetrators is to stretch this
beautiful culture of Yoruba to the breaking point.
“This is something that Yoruba people living away from
Yorubaland do not even think of, and we, therefore, see
no reason why migrants living in Yorubaland should not
know their boundaries.
“Consequently, the ARG calls on all Yoruba traditional
rulers and the executive heads of government at state
and local levels governors not to recognise all
customary titles that are not backed by our customs,
particularly those that they did not confer; and we
enjoin those parading themselves as holders of such
titles to drop them in the spirit of peaceful coexistence.”
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