Seriki chiefs seek to stop Adetunji as Olubadan
Another chieftaincy line in Ibadan, the Seriki, has headed for the court to stop the Oyo State Government and the Olubadan-In-Council from installing the Balogun of Ibadan, High Chief Saliu Adetunji, as the Olubadan of Ibadan land.
The Head of the acclaimed line, Chief
Adebayo Oyediji, and five others yesterday filed a motion seeking an order
compelling the government and the Olubadan-In-Council to instal Oyediji as the
Olubadan.
Oyediji, 89, and others based their prayer
on a 1989 Supreme Court judgment, which ordered the recognition of the Seriki
as the third line to produce the Olubadan.
According to him and the motion filed by
his lawyer, A.G. Adeniran, before the Oyo state Chief Judge, Justice Mukthar
Abimbola, the Olubadan -in-Council had since 1989 when the Seriki line obtained
a Supreme Court judgment in their favour, denied them the opportunity of being
admitted into the Olubadan line.
The businessman alleged disregard for rule
of law on the part of the Olubadan -in-Council. He said he was the next to be
installed Olubadan based on the said judgment.
According to him, the alleged
marginalisation of the Seriki line began since the last Otun Seriki, Chief
Adisa Akinloye, was denied the opportunity before he died in 2007. He said that
Seriki was the third line in the chieftaincy of Olubadan, adding upon the
denial, the Supreme Court in 1989 ordered that Seriki line be included as the
third line to the appointment of Olubadan.
Oyediji claimed that the problem with the
Seriki line started with the making of the 1959 Ekerin Balogun of Ibadan
Chieftaincy Declaration which put Seriki under the Ekerin Balogun of Ibadan and
provided for the first time that Seriki can only be promoted to Ekerin
Balogun only if there are two simultaneous vacancies occurring in the Ashipa
and Ekerin Balogun titles.
He explained that upon winning against the
then Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Oloyede Asanke, and all the Chiefs in Balogun and
Olubadan line, after challenging the said chieftaincy declaration, the Olubadan
then prevailed on the Seriki chiefs not to insist on three lines for the
Olubadan chieftaincy, but that rather chiefs in the Seriki line should cross to
Ekerin Balogun and Ekerin Olubadan on the two lines whenever there is a vacancy
in any of the two lines.
According to him, the out-of-court
agreement was that the Balogun and Olubadan lines would each have two steps of
promotion from Ekarun to Ekerin in their lines before the Seriki line shall
have its own promotion to Ekerin in any of the two lines.
Having been denied the opportunity for
long and following the consecutive deaths of high chiefs Sulaimon Omiyale and
Omowale Kuye from both sides in November and December last year, Chief Oyediji
said that it was the time of Seriki to have a shot at the Olubadan, stressing:
“When the agreement was reached, the late Oba Odulana was the only senior
ranking high chief in the Olubadan line and we were in the same rank. If that
agreement was followed, I am the next person to succeed him.”
In the new motion filed by his lawyer,
Adeniran, dated 19/01/2016 marked I/421/07 seeking an amendment to reflect the
earlier order of the court, he sought a declaration that “by the provision of
the consent judgment delivered by the high court in suit No. I/313/88, it is
the turn of the claimants to produce the next Olubadan of Ibadan on both the
Olubadan line and the Balogun line”.
He also sought the order of the court
“setting aside the purported appointments made by the 1st defendant (Oba
Odulana) to fill vacancies existing in the chieftaincy titles of Ekerin
Olubadan, Ashipa Olubadan, Osi Olubadan, Otun Olubadan and Balogun Olubadan of
Ibadan since the 21st of November, 2008 up till the last appointment he made on
the 1st of January, 2016”.
Oyediji also called for an order “setting
aside the purported approval granted by the Governor of a Oyo state on the 5th
of January, 2016 or thereabout to the appointments made by the 1st defendant on
the 1st of January, 2016 to fill vacancies existing in the chieftaincy titles”.
The Nation
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