Femi Otedola, the Chairman of First Holdco has not increased his stakes in the company to 40 percent as being speculated, THISDAY newspaper reports.
There were reports on Wednesday that the business tycoon had secured a humongous off-market transaction of 10.43 billion units of the financial institution’s shares estimated at N323.4 billion.
The transaction, the reports claimed, raised his stake in First Bank or First Holdco to 36.7 percent, having acquired the shares of two major shareholders in the company, Oba Otudeko and Tunde Hassan-Odukale.
Otudeko and Hassan-Odukale were once Chairmen of First Bank Nigeria Holding Company, FBNH the mother company of Nigeria’s premier commercial bank, First Bank Nigeria Limited, FBNL.
Otudeko was sacked in 2021 by the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, after scrutinizing his tenure as the company’s Board Chairman. He’s being prosecuted on fraud realted charges.
According to the newspaper, Otedola still retains his 15 perecent shares in First Holdco. The 25 percent reportedly acquired by him was acquired by a trustee of the federal government, under a special arrangement and settlement with Otudeko and Odukale.
Otudeko, the reports said was forced to sell his shares in the financial institution in exchange for the federal government to drop the court case against him, while Odukale agreed to exchange his shares for cash, and seek opportunity elsewhere.
The deal, the report stated further was facilitated by the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice and the CBN, a strategic move by the government to ensure that the company met the CBN recapitalization requirement deadline set by the apex bank.
“The shares are now with the trustee for the next two or three weeks when they will decide how to proceed and reach a strategic decision on what to do with the shares and also look at FBN’s plan for capital raise to meet CBN requirement”, a source familiar with the deliberations said.
It will be recalled that following shareholders infighting, Oba Otudeko was charged to Federal High Court based on a criminal complaint by Otedola-led FBN management – the infighting among shareholders left the CBN concerned that FBN may not meet the new capital requirement if the infighting continues. The apex bank working with the Attorney General decided to seek a none legal solution to the infighting, resulting in the exit of Oba Otudeko in return for withdrawing the criminal complaint and prosecution by First Bank.
The result is the movement seen in the market on Wednesday when a total of N324.47 billion value for 10.47 billion units of shares in off-market block trading on First Holdco Plc shares, took place on the floor of the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX).
Oba Otudeko, the erstwhile Chairman of FirstHoldco, was forced to sell off over 20 percent of shares linked to him. Also, another long-term shareholder, the Hassan-Odukale family, voluntarily exited the bank and sold five percent of their holdings in a mega transaction as they sought better shareholder value elsewhere.
It was gathered that the off-market deal was executed at a fixed price of N31.00 per share on NGX as the lender’s stock price yesterday gained 9.9 per cent to close at N32.2 per share.
Yahaya Bello, former Kogi State Governor, has “acquired” a new wife – an addition to his harem. He has already tied the knots, secretly with the lucky one – Hiqma.
He took her as the fourth wife, in a ceremony held in the nation’s Capital, Abuja.
While the event was kept low-key, it drew close friends and family members who gathered to witness the union.
The news broke publicly after Bello’s third wife, Hafiza Yahaya Bello, took to Instagram to share her warm welcome to the new bride.
“Our family just got a little bigger and more loving,” she wrote.
She further offered prayers for harmony and divine blessings in their home.
Bello, served as Governor of Kogi State from 2016 until 2023 under the All Progressives Congress, APC.
He has maintained a relatively private personal life despite his high-profile political career.
He is already married to Amina Oyiza Bello, Rashida Yahaya Bello, and Hafiza Yahaya Bello.
The former governor’s educational background includes both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Business Administration from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria.
Though his time in office was marked by intense political activity, he has generally kept his domestic affairs out of public view.
With the addition of Hiqma to the family, the 2023 APC stalwart continues a new chapter in his life post-governance, maintaining a steady presence in both political and personal spheres.
The Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, on Thursday July 17, 2025, announced an extension to the ongoing Continuous Voter Registration, CVR, exercise in Anambra State.
The decision to extend the exercise is coming on the heels of the widespread calls by many interest groups, including the Ohaneze Ndigbo Youth, for the registration process to be extended.
The Source reports that the Anambra State Chapter of the Ohaneze Ndigbo Youth in a statement issued by its spokesperson, Comrade Uzo Ekemezie, had earlier on Thursday, condemned the exercise, alleging shortage of registration materials, and INEC officials.
According to the group, the avoidable glitches trailing the exercise have made it difficult for many eligible persons to be captured.
The Ohaneze Ndigbo Youths expressed concern that such unnecessary bottlenecks and difficulties may have been part of an orchestrated plot to disenfranchise eligible voters in the State in the forthcoming polls.
But in a statement, the INEC, while acknowledging the high level of voters turn out, said the exercise, rather than ending today Thursday July 17, has been extended to Sunday July 20, 2025.
The electoral umpire noted that the decision to extend the exercise was informed by appeals from well meaning quarters.
According to the Commission, after the extended period, the voter register will be publicly displayed to allow for a period of claims and objections.
This is as it promised to carry out a further clean-up of the data using Automated Biometric Identification System ABIS.
“The Commission is pleased with the turnout of registrants in Anambra State and the peaceful conduct of the CVR in all the 326 registration centres in the State.
“As of yesterday, Wednesday, 16th July, 2025, 96,085, new voters have successfully registered in nine days.
“On average, the Commission registered over 10,600 voters per day. In addition, 12,595 voters applied for transfer of their registration both within and outside the state, while 7,061 persons applied for the update of their records, or to the replacement of their damaged ,or lost Permanent Voters Cards PVCs.
“The CVR in Anambra ends today. However, in response to appeal from citizens, the Commission hereby extends the exercise for three more days. It will now end on Sunday, 20th July 2025.
“Thereafter, the Commission will display the register for claims and objections by citizens as provided by law, followed by a further clean-up of the data using the Automated Biometric Identification System ABIS .
“Subsequently, the detailed breakdown of the new registrants by age ,gender ,occupation and disability will be published for public information .
“At this preliminary stage, 56,017 (%58) of the new registrants are female , while ,%50,429( %52.48 are young people between the ages of 18 and 34″ the INEC statement reads in part.”
The Youth wing of the Apex Igbo socio-cultural body, Ohaneze Ndi Igbo Worldwide, Anambra State Chapter, has strongly condemned the alleged chaotic nature of the ongoing Continuous Voter Registration, CVR, exercise in the State.
This is as the group alleged a hidden plan to systematically disenfranchise a large section of the voting population of the State.
The Source reports that as part of the preparations for the forthcoming August 16, 2025, Anambra South Senatorial District by-election and the November 8, 2025 off-circle Governorship contest, the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC has embarked on Continuous Voter Registration exercise in the State.
But in a statement from its spokesperson, Comrade Uzo Ekemezie, on Thursday, the Ohaneze youth condemned what it described as the spate of avoidable glitches that have so far defined the exercise, particularly, in Ogbaru, Obosi, Isiagu, Anambra East, Anambra West, Ihiala and several other parts of the State.
According to the body, the unfortunate development has regrettably resulted in several thousands of potential voters, being systematically denied their constitutional rights to register and participate in the electoral process.
Ekemezie alleged that the unexplained and avoidable difficulties being experienced by the electorate, in what should, otherwise, be a seamless exercise is a deliberate scheme to disenfranchise the people of the state in future elections.”
According to the Ohaneze Youth, reports from various parts of the State paint a very disturbing picture of an exercise primed to fail with glaring cases of under supply of registration materials, including machines and even officials.
The body expressed serious concern that the limited supply of registration materials and non-availability of enough INEC officials have placed the people at the mercy of the few personnel who are alleged to be extorting the people.
According to the Ohaneze youths, in some cases, people are being forced to travel long distances from their areas to register.
“Even at that, after trekking such long distances ,the people are still faced with difficulties registering owing to shortfalls both in registration materials and registration officials.
The resultant effects include ,the mindless extortion of the people,by the few personnel available.
The situation is also not helped by inadequate network, infrastructure, leading to INEC field officers relying on individuals to provide personal data connectivity to power their systems.
There are reports of extortion, where citizens are being forced to pay money ( bribes) to registration officers in order to exercise their civic right.
“Transaction-driven bottlenecks, especially in populous wards like Obosi , Nigeria’s largest ward where most eligible voters have been unable to register”, the Ohaneze noted.
While describing the situation as totally unacceptable, the body called on the Electoral umpire to as a matter of urgent necessity, consider an extension to the CVR exercise to ensure that no eligible voters are disenfranchised.
The group also demanded for the immediate deployment of adequate human and material resources to ensure a hitch free exercise.
The Kwara State Government on Thursday July 17, 2025, confirmed the arrest of the notorious wanted leader of a daredevil criminal syndicate terrorizing some parts of the State, particularly Edu and Patigi Local Councils.
Tambaya, and over 15 members of his dread criminal gang, were said to have been rounded up by the Kwara State Joint Security Taskforce in a renewed clampdown on identified criminal hideouts in some parts of the State.
A statement from Malam Rafiu Ajakaye ,the Governor’s spokesperson, on Thursday, informed that Tambaya and his gang members have been linked to a series of high profile security breaches in the two Council Areas.
The group according to the State Authorities has been identified as being responsible for several attacks on security personnel ,and vigilantes in and around Edu and Patigi Local Government Areas of recent.
Ajakaye noted that during the coordinated crackdown, said to have been conducted in partnership between the Office of the National Security Adviser ONSA and the Kwara state Government , several members of the Tambaya gang were also killed.
“More than 15 criminals including the out law named Tambaya ,have been arrested in the new security clampdown in the areas.
“Tambaya was the major mastermind of the recent attack on security forces and vigilantes in Gada, Lafiagi.
“Tambaya and eight others were arrested in one encounter with the security forces , while several of his gang members were eliminated”, the Governor’s Chief Press Secretary stated.
The operation, the statement added, led to the rescue of two victims and the recovery of the sum of N11 million from the camp of the criminal syndicate.
This is as the Joint Security forces on Wednesday July 15, also arrested over 20 criminal elements in the Ifelodun Local Government Area of the State.
The Governor’s spokesperson emphasized the unwavering commitment of the joint security team to rid the State of the activities of criminal elements.
As military operations against banditry intensifies, the Defence Headquarters (DHQ) has announced that troops of Operation Hadin Kai apprehended two suspected members of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) for allegedly transporting arms to terrorists.
Director of Defence Media Operations, Maj.-Gen. Markus Kangye, disclosed this on Thursday while providing updates on military operations across the country.
Kangye revealed that the troops arrested the transport union officials at Liya in Biu Local Government Area(LGA) of Borno State.
According to him, the troops also arrested 11 terrorist collaborators and rescued seven kidnapped victims in the North East.
He added that 16 family members of terrorists — including four adult females and 12 children — surrendered to troops in Bama LGA of Borno on Monday.
He added that preliminary investigations revealed that the group surrendered from Bakura Jega village.
“Two members of NURTW were arrested in Liya, Biu LGA of Borno while receiving waybill from a truck driver which corresponded with intelligence received earlier on the said consignment.
“The items include 13 pairs of military uniforms and some high voltage batteries amongst others.
“Troops also arrested a 65-year-old man, a terrorists’ logistics supplier at Damasak Motor Park in Yobe on Sunday. Troops also recovered some quantities of arms and ammunition.
“They also retrieved and safely detonated some IEDs, while the sum of N17,150.00 was also recovered.”
Kangye also disclosed that troops of Operation UDO KA, also apprehended a tax collector for the Indigenous People of Biafra and Eastern Security Network (IPOB/ESN) in Anambra.
He said the suspect was nabbed with the sum of N1.5 million in his possession.
“On July 10, troops arrested an POB/ESN terrorists’ collaborator who was commissioned by the terrorists to collect taxes from the locals on their behalf in Ihiala LGA of Anambra. The troops recovered the sum of N1.5 million from the suspect.”
The Nigeria Football Federation, NFF, and the entire nation have once again been thrown into mourning following the death of former Super Eagles Coach, Monday Sinclair.
The late Sinclair died at the age of 88 years.
He was a former Interim Super Eagles Coach.
Confirming his death on Wednesday, ex-Nigerian international and former Super Eagles goalkeeper, Peterside Idah, who played under Sinclair at Sharks Football Club, Port Harcourt, and regarded him as a mentor.
In a tribute shared on Facebook, Idah wrote, “Our daddy is gone. What a man. He signed me to play for Sharks and gave me my first match against the Niger Tornadoes of Minna.
“The first day he saw me come to train, he said, ‘My friend, are you a boxer?’ He said I was built like Tyson. From that day, I found me a football father.”
Coach Sinclair was widely respected for his football acumen, tactical intelligence, and commitment to grassroots development.
His playing days spanned the 1960s, but his coaching legacy extended far beyond.
He coached several top-tier Nigerian clubs, including Sharks FC, Rangers International, Heartland, Bayelsa United, Udoji United, and Niger Tornadoes, among others.
He also managed the Nzalang Nacional, the national team of Equatorial Guinea.
In 1997, Sinclair was briefly appointed interim coach of the Super Eagles, taking charge of friendlies in Tunisia and Zambia following the exit of Frenchman, Philippe Troussier.
Beyond the sidelines, Sinclair was one of the few Nigerian coaches to document his experiences in books, using his stories to inspire younger coaches and players.
Sinclair’s death comes amid a worrying pattern of losses within the Nigerian sports community.
In recent months, notable ex-athletes and coaches—including Peter Rufai, Christian Chukwu, and others—have passed away or fallen seriously ill, prompting urgent conversations around the welfare of retired sports professionals.
The South West security outfit, Amotekun Corps, has foiled the payment of ransom by kidnapped victims and rescued them in Ondo State.
The Ondo State Commander of Amotekun Corps, Adetunji Adeleye, told newsmen in Akure that this was one of the success stories of the security outfit within the past two weeks.
Adeleye, also, announced that 17 suspects were arrested and are, currently, assisting in getting to the root of the matter.
According to Adeleye, the latest rescue mission occurred within the last 24 hours, where a chief in a community close to Akure was kidnapped, and the Amotekun Corps, in collaboration with local hunters, pursued the kidnappers overnight and rescue the chief and an Okada rider without paying any ransom.
“The latest of this rescue mission took place in the last 24 hours, where a chief in a community close to Akure was kidnapped, and our distress line was contacted.
“With the joint efforts of the local hunters, and officers and men of Amotekun, we walked overnight, pursued the kidnappers, and were able to save the two of them, the chief and the Okada rider without payment of any ransom.
“Again, kidnappers in Akoko axis, the northern senatorial axis of the state, were arrested, while attempting to kidnap some victims along Ajegunle Road, and between 1 and 2 a.m, they ravaged their farms, raped their women, and ran away.
“Our tactical team moved in, under the leadership of the area commander of our Zone 6, and within 48-hours, the people were released, and three suspects identified as part of the gang were arrested.
“We have them here, both the victims and the suspects. The same thing goes to the central senatorial district, where some suspected kidnappers were arrested again by officers and men of the Amotekun Corps, and they had equally been identified.”
He said the Amotekun Corps has also arrested suspects involved in robbery and rape cases, with eight of them facing charges for breaking the law and order, three for kidnapping, and six for robbery and rape.
Adeleye emphasized the government’s stance against kidnapping for ransom in Ondo State, urging farmers to return to their farms and assuring them of the corps’ commitment to maintaining peace and security.
“What the government of Ondo State is saying is that we are saying no to kidnap for ransom in Ondo State. Herders are free to do their business, farmers are free to cultivate. Farmers will not infringe on the rights of the herders, while herders have no right to destroy people’s farm.
“So on farmers and herders clashes, even though this has reduced, we are saying the government does not want it to happen to prevent scarcity of food in the next season. We want farmers to go back to their farms.
“As we talk, the Amotekun Rangers are in the forest, and we want to thank the farmers and members of the public, the Hunters Association, and the Vigilante Groups for giving us timely information to work with.”
I met him several times after he became Nigeria’s president in 2015, but the meetings did not change my impression of him as an enigma. Yet, as history peels back layer after layer of Muhammadu Buhari’s place, we may discover the essence of his beguiling simplicity.
Tight-lipped and taciturn, a soldier in bearing and character, his life was marked by complex dimensions that shaped his political and personal trajectory.
Escape route
Born on December 17, 1942, in Daura, northwest Nigeria, in a region now fraught with banditry and violent crimes, Buhari began his military career by joining the Nigerian Army in 1961. In a viral video, Buhari told his interviewer and former Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Sheikh Ali Pantami, in Hausa that the army was an escape route to avoid being yoked with a bride in his early years – a culture still practised widely among his ethnic stock.
A less-publicised version of the story was that after losing his father at an early age, leaving him with very little family support, he went into the military to avoid being a burdento his maternal uncle.
Trained in Nigeria, Britain, India, and the United States, he fought in the Nigerian Civil War under the command of Olusegun Obasanjo’s Third Marine Commando Division. These exposures would likely shape his world view and disdain for a society where accountability had assumed a nebulous character and systems were being undermined.
Based on personal character and principle, Buhari would be selected by other military accomplices dissatisfied with the civilian administration’s economic management to lead the government after toppling the civilian administration of Alhaji Shehu Shagari in 1983.
These same accomplices would later find him too rigid, too stiff, and perhaps too honest. Like they had done to Shagari, they mobilised and rendered Buhari harmless through a palace coup barely two years later.Then they kept him in detention and solitary confinement for three years. He was in detention when his mother died, and his request to pay his final respects before her burial was declined, deepening his animosity with the Babangida regime.
Muhammadu Buhari
A cult hero Except for the legend of Ahmadu Bello or perhaps Aminu Kano, no individual in northern Nigeria has commanded the cult following and mass appeal that Buhari had. His reputation as an honest man effortlessly earned him a fanatical followershipamong ordinary folks. It became his best political capital, which, despite himself, was used to drag him into politics, a terrain a reclusive Buhari would have viewed from a distance.
His mass appeal was widely feared by the northern elite, who lacked the ordinary people’s trust.That appeal became a free vehicle on which many a political aspirant, without Buhari’s kind of credibility and self-denial, rode to political office. All they needed was to claim allegiance with Mai Gaskiya – the honest man.
Emotionally reserved, often projecting an image of stern seriousness, Buhari frequently left political associates guessing.His reserve contrasted sharply with the more charismatic and transactional disposition of Nigerian political figures, creating a mystique and ambivalence.His silence was a rather strange component of political dialectics.
Disdain for opulence
Buhari maintained a public image marked by disdain for corruptly acquired wealth and materialism. He frequently admonished people in public office to live by their means.
It is speculated in some circles that his separation from his first wife and mother of his first five children, Safinatu, was due to what he considered extravagant overtures made to her by Babangida’s wife, Maryam, while he was in detention.Until the end, there was no love lost between Buhari and Babangida – a fact once made bare in Buhari’s angry response to my question about the report of a military panel that advised Babangida’s removal before the 1985 coup.
His effort to promote governance that emphasised detachment from corruption and extravagance became flaccid under civil governance, where he delegated authority but failed to provide necessary supervisory oversight.
The war he never won
Divested of military authority, Buhari’s passion for rooting out corruption became an albatross. His Aviation Minister, Hadi Sirika,promised the nation a national airline that has become a reference for public ridicule and sheer callousness. His Minister for Justice, Abubakar Malami, brazenlywaged turf wars and executed a vendetta on anticorruption officials. If you thought Buhari would be livid, he surprised everyone by doing nothing.
Despised by the elite and profiled by the media as a dictator, Buhari became a hostage in trying to prove he was a full convert to the democratic ethos. Only a Buhari would sit by and watch a minority party share strategic offices in the military, federal cabinet, and choice federal agencies overseen by theNational Assembly, where his party had absolute control.
Cabinet appointees fully exploited such ambivalence, mostly career politicians with decades of experience gaming the system. It is, however, a credit to him that his non-interference in party issues and legislative processes strengthened the democratic process.
June 12 ‘coup’
Buhari’s military boss, Olusegun Obasanjo, reaped the windfall of the June 12 political impasse to placate Nigeria’s turn-by-turn political system. But it shall remain to the eternal credit of Buhari that he took deliberate action to resolve what had become a chasm on the country’s political map.
He went on to resolve other festering issues like settling veterans of the Nigerian Civil War on the Biafran side who had been abandoned; paying off the liabilities of Nigerian Airways employees liquidated by the Obasanjo administration; and fulfilling commitments made to the national football team by previous administrations after decades of official dubiousness and treachery.
Tough luck
Buhari won the presidency in 2015, and almost like a blast from a whistle, falling oil prices triggered a recession in the economy he had inherited on a false foundation. The country faced dramatic challenges, which heavily impacted oil production, with youth in the oil-producing Niger Delta, from where Buhari’s predecessor hailed, doubling down on the sabotage of oil infrastructure as vengeance for losing the 2015 elections.
Again, on the morning of his second term, the world took a hit from the COVID pandemic, which sent an already tottering economy closer to the cliff. The lockdowns sped up inflation and affected Buhari’s efforts to boost domestic food production. His frail health didn’t help matters.
Tunnel vision
Buhari’s tunnel visionfocused intensely on anti-corruption and security, sometimes at the expense of broader governance issues. Thirty years after he left power and regained it, his mind still seemed frozen in the past compared with other rulers who benefited from a broader worldview even after leaving office.
This hampered his administration’s responsiveness to diverse socio-economic challenges. Issues like grazing routes and cattle colonies became fissures on an already fragile geopolitical balancing, in addition to perceived bias in political appointments.
Near abdication
If indifference and aloofness plagued Buhari’s presidency, this became even more palpable towards the conclusion of his second term. Unconcerned about the succession struggles within his party and the political manoeuvres of his central bank governor, who unleashed a self-serving currency redesign policy on the country, Buhari was signing off with low approval ratings even from his popular home base. The results manifested in the subsequent national elections.
The nation railed and whined that its president had no school certificate. Dissident groups contrived false images and spread malicious rumours that Buhari had died and that a “Jibril from Sudan” was the effigy in Aso Rock. Political engineers improvised a marriage in which the president was supposed to take his cabinet minister as a new wife – they even printed invitation cards. They must all have been confounded by Buhari’s superhuman silence. Or sometimes, by his sense of irony.
‘Baba Go-Slow’
For example, when I visited him with core Buharist and founding Chairman of LEADERSHIP, Sam Nda-Isaiah, a few months after the 2015 election, I was spooked by Buhari’s sense of humour. The Guardian on Sunday was among the pile of newspapers on a side table that day. He lingered on a page and lowered the paper. “Nda,” he said, which was how he called the LEADERSHIP publisher. “Who is the tortoise in this cartoon?”
“It’s you,” Sir. Nda-Isaiah replied. The cartoon was labelled ‘Baba Go-Slow’, a stinging commentary that it was taking him months to name his cabinet.
“You mean this is me?” Buhari exploded in laughter. Given the country’s desperate situation at the time, the humour was lost on me. But that, sometimes, was Buhari for you.
Ishiekwene is the Editor-in-Chief of LEADERSHIP and author of the book, Writing for Media and Monetising It.
Oluwo of Iwo disagrees, says it has liberated Yoruba Monarchs
A group, which identified itself as Concerned Sons and Daughters of Ijebuland, has described the funeral rites of the Awujale of Ijebuland, His Royal Majesty, Oba Sikiru Adetona, GCON, as an abominable act.
Oba Adetona who passed on Sunday, July 13, 2025, was the very respected Paramount Ruler of Ijebuland.
The group, in a strongly-worded statement, said that the interment of the Awujale, outside the sacred grounds of Igbo Odu, the traditional burial ground of Ijebuland’s forefathers was a sacrilege.
Oba Adetona who passed at the age of 91 was buried on the premises of his private residence in strict compliance with Muslim rites, on Monday, July 14, as approved by him before his passing.
Recall that on the day of his funeral, security personnel had prevented Traditionalists who arrived in their scores to perform traditional rites on his body from assessing it, an act, applauded by the Oluwo of Iwo, Oba Abdulrosheed Akanbi.
The statement by the group reads:
“It is with a heavy heart and a deeply troubled spirit that we condemn in the strongest cultural and spiritual terms the decision to bury our revered Monarch, the Awujale of Ijebuland, outside the sacred grounds of Igbo Odu, the traditional resting place of our fathers.
This act is not merely a deviation, it is an abomination.
“Eku may no longer cry as eku, eja may no longer cry as eja, and Omo eniyan may no longer speak with the dignity of mankind.
“These are not empty words; they echo the depth of our spiritual fears and ancestral warnings. To bury the custodian of our culture, our history, and our soul within the confines of his personal residence, rather than within the sacred earth prepared by our forebearers, is to shake the foundations of Ijebuland’s spiritual covenant.
“Let it be known that this act violates centuries of ancestral protocols.
“It threatens the spiritual continuity of our kingship.
It invites ancestral vengeance, disrupts communal harmony, and may plague generations yet unborn with confusion and misfortune.
“The Awujale was not a mere mortal in our eyes; he was Orisa, a symbol of divine authority and as such, he deserved not just our respect in life, but the sacred transition owed to every true monarch in death.
“We, therefore, call on the Council of Chiefs, royal lineage, custodians of Ijebu traditions, and all well-meaning sons and daughters of the land to:
Review and correct this abomination, if at all still spiritually possible.
Ensure this unholy precedent is not repeated or normalised.
Convene a reconciliation with the ancestors to appease the offended spirits.
“The abomination in Yoruba land, especially Ijebu which is home of traditions and cultural heritage
The place where Obas (traditional kings) are buried is traditionally known in Yoruba culture as “Ile Odù” or “Igbo Orò” or “Ìgbó Olófin or Igbo Oloja” depending on the town or kingdom.
“It is often a sacred forest or ancestral shrine set aside specifically for the burial of kings and sometimes high-ranking traditional chiefs. The exact name may vary from one Yoruba kingdom to another, but the concept is the same, a spiritually-significant place reserved solely for royal burials.
WHY ARE OBAS BURIED DIFFERENTLY?
Obas are not buried like ordinary people because:
Spiritual Continuity: Obas are believed to be semi-divine or representatives of the gods on earth (e.g. some are seen as descendants of Oduduwa or Oranmiyan). Their burial is considered a transition to the ancestral realm.
Preservation of Sacred Knowledge: Some believe certain rituals must be performed to transfer spiritual authority and protect the kingdom from chaos.
Cultural Tradition: The process is tied to long-standing customs, often involving traditional rites, secret societies (like the Ogboni’s, Osogbo’s or Oro cult), and kingmakers.
Protection of Royal Secrets: The location and method of burial often remain secret to protect the sanctity of the royal stool and kingdom.
What Happens If a King Is Not Buried in the Designated Place?
Disregarding these traditions is believed to have serious consequences:
Spiritual Disruption: It is feared that the spirit of the king may not rest or may become vengeful, causing unrest in the kingdom.
Cultural Desecration: It is seen as an abomination, which could invite curses, misfortune, or disunity within the community.
Loss of Legitimacy: Future kings may be seen as illegitimate if the predecessor was not properly buried, affecting traditional authority and rites.
Ancestral Disconnect: It disrupts the line of spiritual succession and communion with the ancestors, which is vital in Yoruba cosmology.
“It’s Abomination to Yoruba land when all the spiritual rites are not thoroughly put in place for any king in our society
“May the land forgive us.
May the ancestors find a voice again And may Ijebuland not become a shadow of herself.”
Meanwhile, the Oluwo of Iwo, has applauded the funeral rites accoded the Awujale. He described it as a landmark victory for the Yoruba Traditional Institution and a step towards restoring its sanctity.
He said: “The noble funeral rites of Awujale is a win-win for the Yoruba race, particularly, myself. It signals freedom of Yoruba Traditional Rulers from physical and spiritual oppression after their death.
“The seizure of a King’s corpse by any secret group should be optional, depending on the wishes of his family.
“Any town wishing to have a king butchered after death, should appoint a herbalist, or an Ognoni as its king.”