Agbogidi, Obi Nduka of Issele-Uku Kingdom. |
Issele-Uku Kingdom, the headquarters of Aniocha North Local
Government Area of Delta State, has finally put a seal to her refusal to allow
a private Hausa market, proposed by one Mrs. Mary Eboigbe (Proprietress of DEMA
Kitchen) to be set up in the community.
At a final meeting on Friday May 22nd, 2020 at the Issele-Uku
Royal Palace with the woman who claimed that she bought the land and wanted to
convert it to a private Hausa market, the Obi of Issele-Uku Kingdom, Agbogidi
Obi Nduka (MNSE), who presided over the meeting disclosed to her the decision
of the community.
The Royal Father who started by disparaging the business woman
for insulting the community and desecrating the land with her foul language of
being untouchable even as a stranger, told her that the market cannot be
situated in the town and that she should tell her Hausa traders already killing
pigs and cows for sale to move away from the place.
Obi Nduka cited various reasons why private markets cannot exist
in Issele-Uku without traditional procedural modalities and consensus of the
people of Issele-Uku.
First, he said that Issele-Uku holds their Afor market in high
esteem and can never cave in to any pressure from any quarter for any illegal
market to be set up, insisting there are traditional reasons for not allowing
any other market in the town except Afor market or as otherwise decided by the
community. He said the people of Issele-Uku ascribe so much traditional respect
to Afor market as something kept sacred for centuries by our forefathers and
had never been broken by anybody not to talk of strangers.
Secondly, he cited security reasons. He said the land in
question is located at the Benin-Asaba expressway, a location where armed
bandits had regularly kidnapped persons and terrorized the community.
Thirdly, he said that the land belongs to the community and
designated for development. He said all the land from the Ministry of Works to
Costain area in that axis belonged to the community and wondered why anybody
would have sold it to somebody who wants to bring in people that were dislodged
from Abraka market for breach of security.
The Obi who earlier asked Mrs. Mary Eboigbe to produce the
document used to purchase the land, insisted that the survey plan she produced
did not amount to evidence of ownership. He ordered her to produce the land
documents to enable the community take up a case against the person who sold a
community land to her.
Agbogidi Nduka also used the medium to appreciate everybody who
tried one way or the other to intervene in the matter, adding that the issue
had finally been put to rest as the community had decided not to allow another
market in the town other than Afor market.
The traditional ruler therefore sounded a note of warning to
those who engage in trespassing on community land to desist from such or be
dealt with.
He reiterated that according to the laws and traditions of
Issele-Uku, before anybody, indigenes and non indigenes alike can possess a
purchased land, the person would have presented drinks to the village that
owned the land and then would have obtained a land ownership certificate from
the palace.
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