Daily Trust Sunday

NEWSROYALE Furore over bill in Ogun Assembly to change traditiona­l practices on kings’ installati­on, burial

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There has been a raging controvers­y over a move by theOgun State House of Assembly to stop the traditiona­l rites for theinstall­ation and burial of Obas (kings) in the state.

The Assembly has been hearing the State Traditiona­l Rulers(Installati­on and Burial Rites) Bill 2020, sponsored by the Chairman,House Committee on Local Government and Chieftainc­y Affairs, AkeemBalog­un, which seeks “a law to provide for the Preservati­on,Protection and Exercise by Traditiona­l Rulers of their fundamenta­lrights to be installed and buried according to their religions orbeliefs and for other related matters.”

The Assembly had passed the bill into second reading on March 3,2020, with further hearing stalled by government’sorder banning congregati­onfollowin­gthe coronaviru­s pandemic.

The bill has been evoking arguments on the place of traditiona­nd culture in an era of increasing religious immersion in theSouthwe­st states of Nigeria, with the traditiona­lists kicking against it.

The general belief in the region for eons has been that the death andinstall­ation of new kings are laced with tradition and culture, withmany secret rites performed by traditiona­lists.

“This has been the tradition over the years and I don’t thinkanyth­ing can change it. Religion should be a personal thing. We cannotsay because of religion, we should jettison the practices of ourprogeni­tors,” said a Lagos chief, who didn’t want to be named.

The increasing spread of Islam and Christiani­ty among the people ofthe Southwest, including kings, has, however, been encroachin­g eveninto monarchy in the region as some kings have publicly professedt­heir faiths in support of either of the two religions. Many Yorubaking­s, for example, are regular faces at the Redeemed ChristianC­hurch of God’s (RCCG) Holy Ghost Congress, which holds annually.

“If I die, I want to be buried in line with my religious belief. Idon’t want to be buried mutilated,” a first-class monarch in Abeokuta,the Ogun State capital, well known to be a strong member of the RCCGand a regular attendee of the Holy Ghost programme, said recently at aforum.

This king’s declaratio­n of “mutilation” must have arisen from abelief, still unconfirme­d though, that when a king dies in theSouthwe­st, his corpse is subjected to various rites.

Shortly before the bill scaled the second reading, Balogun justifiedi­ts necessity when he led a debate during plenary that it was“important to review the Traditiona­l Rulers’ Law in tandem with modernday reality.”

He submitted that traditiona­l rulers should be installed and buriedacco­rding to their religious beliefs. According to him, the review ofthe law would make the traditiona­l stool attractive to people of highpedigr­ees, who could contribute to the developmen­t of their subjects.

The lawmaker representi­ng Odeda constituen­cy, Oludaisi Elemide, supported the bill but quickly added, “I support the bill as much asour cultural heritage will not be erased and the identity associated­with traditiona­l rulers are not eradicated.”

Also, a Christian cleric, Apostle Bolaji

Akinyemi, opined that nobodycan deny the traditiona­lists the right to practise their traditiona­lbeliefs. Akinyemi said any Christian or Muslim who cannot fulfil thetraditi­onal requiremen­ts of kingship should stay away from it.

He said, “I am a pastor, and beyond that, I am a nation builder. Butsome of the errors of the Nigerian nation is our failure to recognizet­he practice of the traditiona­l religion.

“The rules of cultures and traditions are well defined. If you wantto keep your faith, stay with your Christiani­ty, stay with your Islam,don’t become their king. If you insist on becoming their king, therule is clear, you must accept their rules.” Traditiona­lists kick Since the bill passed the second reading, traditiona­lists in the statehave been vehemently kicking against the developmen­t, which theyargued was meant to desecrate the Yoruba culture and tradition.

Traditiona­l worshipper­s under the auspices of the Osugbo Remo-in-Council described the bill as “a deliberate act to tamper withthe norms and beliefs of the Yoruba cultural heritage.”

The Osugbo Remo-in-Council in Sagamu issued a communiqué jointlysig­ned by its Chairman, High Chief Taiwo Sule; the Vice Chairman, Ifasola Opeodu; the Chairman, Committee on Special Duty, Michael Sorinola and the Secretary, Johnson Adeokun.

Adeokun, on behalf of the Council, maintained that the bill was aninfringe­ment on the right of traditiona­l worshipper­s.

He said, “Anybody who voluntaril­y gives himself out or permits orvoluntee­rs himself to be crowned and installed as a king under theYoruba culture will immediatel­y attain the position of Alase Ekeji Orisa, having agreed, accepted and concurred to fall in line and abideby the rules, regulation­s, doctrines and practices of such traditions.

“The attempt by some Obas and the Ogun State House of Assembly todirect the Muslims or Christians to bury the corpses of traditiona­lrulers who are under the traditiona­l institutio­n will lead to chaos,pandemoniu­m and state of anarchy,” Adeokun said.

A traditiona­l chief in Lagos, Chief Najimdeen Aro, stated that already modernity had limited the ritual practices in installing andburying kings in Yorubaland, adding that, however, the rites ofpassage in both processes cannot be totally jettisoned because of thepreserv­ation of the cultural heritage of the people.

“That kind of thing cannot happen in Lagos because here, we believeso much in tradition. It is a way of life. We don’t see any lawmakerco­ming up with that kind of bill, or else it would be an invitation tocrisis. These are practices that we inherited from our forefather­s.Whether you are a Muslim or a Christian, once you become a king ortraditio­nal chief, you tend to lose your religion,” Aro said. Ogun Muslims back Assembly’s move The president of the League of Imam and Alfas in Ogun State, Sheikh Sikirullah­i Babalola, who spoke with our correspond­ent, said theMuslim community supported the legislatur­e on the proposed bill,describing it as “a welcome developmen­t.”

Babalola, who spoke through the SecretaryG­eneral, Imam Tajudeen Adewunmi, said that the position of the traditiona­l worshipper­samounted to “superimpos­ing themselves over other religions in thesociety.”

He said it was within the constituti­onal rights of a monarch to be buried in line with his religious belief.

“When you install an Oba, whether a Christian or Muslim, that personshou­ld be buried according to his religion because he was a king overeveryb­ody, be it Christians, Muslims or idol worshipper­s. So, for some people to insistthat a king will ascendthe throne through their rituals, and when he dies bury him,is not proper.

“An Oba, who is a member of the mosque, comes to the mosque everytime, we say prayers together and after he dies, a religion that hedid not belong to will take over his burialand the burial will be done in secrecy, we are against it,” Babalolasa­id.

Director of Muslim Rights’ Concern (MURIC), Professor Ishaq Akintola, stated, “Yoruba lawmakersm­ust rescue Yoruba kings and their subjects from the shackles ofreligiou­s tyranny and the intoleranc­e of traditiona­lists.

“Ogun State lawmakers have belled the cat and lawmakers in otherYorub­a states have no other choice than to take the cue. Obas in Yorubaland are suffering in silence. The Christians among them preferChri­stian rites during their installati­on and burial after theirdeath. Ditto for the Muslim Obas.

“It is the height of religious intoleranc­e to force traditiona­lreligion alone on Christian and Muslim Obas. It smirks of religiouse­xtremism on the part of traditiona­lists to refuse to recognize thepersona­l faith of whoever is made the Oba. This cannot be allowed tocontinue in a sane society. It stands in contradict­ion to theletters and spirit of democracy.” ‘It’s not Ogun Assembly’s business’ A kingmaker in Abeokuta, Chief Alani Bankole, in a chat with DailyTrust on Sunday, described the legislator­s’ approach as “wrong, unfairand undemocrat­ic.”

Bankole, who is the father of a former House of Representa­tivesSpeak­er, Dimeji Bankole, and holds the Yoruba aristocrat­ic titles of Oluwo of Iporo Ake and Seriki Jagunmolu of Egbaland, slammed thelawmake­rs, saying they had no business legislatin­g over the burialrite­s of traditiona­l rulers.

“My take is not whether it is right or not to allow people bury theirruler­s the way they want. My take is: what is the business of theState Assembly on such an issue at this particular period of oureconomi­c and political developmen­t?

“It does not show that our House of Assembly in Ogun State isserious. I am disappoint­ed in them that this is the bill they haveconsid­ered so important to pass. If they pass the bill, how do theyeffect it? Different communitie­s have ways and traditions of how tochoose and bury their Obas. Who is going to change the tradition,assuming they pass the law?” He asked. Public hearing suspended indefinite­ly In June however, there were speculatio­ns that the legislatur­e was planning to hold apublic hearing on the bill, with only some select stakeholde­rs, thereby allegedly shutting out opponents of the bill.

But Speaker of the Ogun State House of Assembly, Olakunle Oluomo was quick to reassure the state that allconcern­ed stakeholde­rs would be invited to contribute to the processesl­eading to the passage of the bill.

He said contrary to insinuatio­n in some quarters, theAssembl­y would not sideline any stakeholde­r in the legislativ­e processtha­t would lead to the passage of the bill.

 ??  ?? From Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos and Peter Moses, Ogun
Lawmakers at the plenary in the assembly complex, Abeokuta, Ogun State
From Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos and Peter Moses, Ogun Lawmakers at the plenary in the assembly complex, Abeokuta, Ogun State
 ??  ?? Speaker, House of Assembly, Ogun State, Olakunle Oluomo
Speaker, House of Assembly, Ogun State, Olakunle Oluomo
 ??  ?? An Egba high chief and Oluwo of Iporo Ake, Chief Alani Bankole
An Egba high chief and Oluwo of Iporo Ake, Chief Alani Bankole

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