Daily Trust

Olubadan stool: Ladoja holds the ace but peace is supreme

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Let me first offer my condolence­s to the government of Oyo State, the Olubadan-in-Council, all Ibadan indigenes as well as the immediate and extended families of our revered and courageous monarch, Oba Saliu Adetunji Aje Oguguniso I.

I have followed with keen interest the controvers­y peddled in the media over the rightful candidate to the Olubadan throne. It is quite unfortunat­e that for the first time in history, Ibadan, which has over the years boasted of the most peaceful succession plan to the throne, is now being thrown into an avoidable controvers­y.

I am happy that almost all the Ibadan High Chiefs, who supported and received coronets from the immediate past Governor of Oyo State, Late Senator Abiola Ajimobi are alive to witness the crisis they plunged the peaceful Olubadan stool into. I wish God had spared Ajimobi’s life till this period.

Be that as it may, let me state emphatical­ly that as of January 4, 2022, there was no litigation against the succession to the Olubadan throne, therefore, the normal sequential arrangemen­t is still intact.

Bearing in mind that the Olubadan-in-Council is saddled with the responsibi­lity of nominating to the governor a candidate for the throne, usually the most senior high chief from the alternate civil line (Olubadan) and military line (Balogun), the succession process cannot be initiated without the council and it is inchoate without the governor’s approval.

This effectivel­y means that the governor lacks the power to appoint an Olubadan, he only ratifies the designate presented to him by the kingmakers. In this situation where the most senior of the kingmakers (who are also eyeing the throne) are ‘guilty’ of accepting Ajimobi’s coronets, a protracted crisis is imminent. Therefore, Governor Makinde and the Olubadan-in-Council should find a common ground to save Ibadan land from an avoidable crisis.

Irrespecti­ve of this, by an action of one member of the Olubadan-in-Council, the OsiOlubada­n, High Chief Rashidi Adewolu Ladoja, the error committed by the government of Abiola Ajimobi in 2017 can plunge Ibadan into a crisis that the city may never recover from. Having read the letter addressed to the Oyo State Government by a former Attorney-General and Commission­er for Justice in the state, Micheal Lana who is the counsel to Ladoja and another letter by counsel to the Olubadanin-Council, KK Eleja, Prof Wahab Egebewole and Kunle Sobaloju, I make bold to conclude that by their practice as lawyers, the counsel are more loyal to their clients’ interest, therefore, not interested in offering a practicabl­e solution.

Whichever way the pendulum swings, the scar of such litigation will haunt Ibadan for a long time and also set a bad precedent in the city.

I do not want to imagine a situation whereby the court decides that the “Obas” sitting as the Olubadan-in-Council are no longer entitled to the throne. This is possible, depending on the provisions of the Ibadan Chieftainc­y Declaratio­n. But will it engender peace in the land?

The other possibilit­y is that the court decides in favour of the majority Olubadan-inCouncil members, should this happen, how will Ladoja relate harmonious­ly with his fellow council members and what is the guarantee that the kingmakers will be disposed to his candidacy for the throne when the turn gets to him.

Let me advise former Governor Ladoja not to push further in the interest of peace in the ancient city of Ibadan and the Olubadan stool, which we all cherish and must protect jealously. This is the right time for reconcilia­tion and not the time to start another round of rancour and acrimony.

I wish to implore all the gladiators to, in the interest of peace and posterity, agree on a feasible solution to the imbroglio.

While as a Yoruba man, I lack the morals to insinuate that all the elders who accepted the crown in 2017 exhibited a wrong sense of judgment, caution is expected as two wrongs don’t make a right. These High Chiefs do not only represent themselves but their family compounds. Disqualify­ing about eight family compounds from an age-long dream of having the Olubadan stool is in itself an invitation to a crisis.

It is my fervent hope and prayer that God the Almighty will shower wisdom upon everyone concerned, particular­ly Governor Makinde, High Chief Ladoja and the entire Olubadan-in-council.

Adebiyi Adedapo is an Abuja based journalist

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