From Lateef Dada, Osogbo
Osun state chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC), has kicked against the appointment of Prince Ademola Makinde as the new Owa of Igbajo in Boluwaduro Local Government, a position being held by the former state chairman of the APC, Oba Gboyega Famodun.
Governor Ademola Adeleke sacked Famodun as Owa of Igbajo, saying the process that led to his installation by former governor Adegboyega Oyetola did not follow due process.
A statement by the state Commissioner for Information and Public Enlightenment, Kolapo Alimi, on Monday, stated that the appointment of the new monarch was ratified at the state executive council held Monday morning.
Alimi said the nomination of Makinde as forwarded by the local government was approved in line with due process, chieftaincy law, and tradition.
However, in a statement by its state chairman, Tajudeen Lawal, the APC protested against the appointment, describing it as “falsehoods, deceits, and stratagems employed by Adeleke to run his administration to the detriment of rule of law, fair play, due process, and justice.”
“Is governor Adeleke not aware that there are subsisting cases on the Obaship conundrum in three competent courts of law and that he as the state governor, is a defendant in all the suits?
“Would it be right in the estimation of governor Adeleke that he should be a judge in his case? Thank God that the judiciary in whom we have absolute confidence, would adjudicate with fairness on the issue.
“I am telling Governor Adeleke with an air of finality that he would be disgraced on the Oba Famodun’s issue.
“Was it proper to put beads on the necks of some urchins who are non-natives of Igbajo to fraudulently pose as the kingmakers in the governor’s office, state government secretariat, Abere, for nauseating gratifications when no legally-recognized kingmakers were ready to have a hand in such a dirty and criminal conduct?
“I pity Mr. Makinde for allowing the Adelekes to break a political metaphorical coconut on his head because of his rabid ambition to occupy a non-existing office of the Owa of Igbajo currently being legally occupied by Oba Phillips Adegboyega Famodun.
“It wasn’t a wise decision for the Adeleke ally to have ditched a plum job of thirty years at an oil company and wittingly offered to be a willing tool in the hands of disgruntled politicians who would catalyze the loss of the two jobs,” APC said.