The Alaafin of Oyo is in trouble for alleged criminalities and has been dragged before the International Criminal Court
In 2014, the inspector general of police was asked to investigate the Alaafin but he ignored the order
One of the allegations against the Alaafin is that he planned
to bomb Oloja’s palace and Isale Oyo praying ground during the 2009 Eid
Kabir festival day included
The International Criminal Court (ICC), the Hague, has acknowledged a
petition against the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi over alleged
criminalities relating to murder, bomb planting and human rights abuse.
The petition titled: “Unprecedented criminality, flagrant human
rights violations, bomb planting, gun running and unresolved
assassinations in Oyo town, Oyo state” was delivered to the ICC on September 9, 2015.
We exclusively obtained copies of both the petition and ICC’s letter,
dated February 2, 2016, acknowledging receipt of the petition.
The ICC reply came just over a week after President Muhammadu Buhari received similar petition against Oba Adeyemi.
Earlier on December 15, 2014, Justice Ayo Emmanuel of the Federal
High Court, sitting in Ibadan, granted an order of mandamus brought
before it by Jacob Oluokun and Sulaiman Ishola to compel the Inspector
General of Police to investigate the criminal allegations,
against Oba Adeyemi.
But since the order was given, the Nigerian Police have continued to
disregard the directive even after the IGP, Solomon Arase, was
threatened with jail term for contempt of court.
“Successive IGPs have refused to obey the order (to investigate
the Alaafin) even after two letters of reminder on January 5 and 21,” the petitioners’ counsel, Abiodun Abdur-Raheem said.
We obtained a copy of Form 48 – “Notice of Consequences of
Disobedience to Order of Court” – served on the Inspector General of
Police on June 16, 2015.
“You will be guilty of contempt of court and will be liable to be
committed to prison” in the event of failure to investigate the
Alaafin, the Ibadan High Court warned the police chief, Arase.
“Yet, there has not been Police action despite preponderance of
facts and evidence which made the court to compel the Police to
investigate the monarch in the first place,” Abdur-Raheem lamented.
According to him, the petition to the ICC was “in a bid to further press for justice.
“We write as concerned indigenes and residents of the ancient Oyo
town, Oyo State, who are disturbed by the wanton murder of innocent
citizens and the traumatisation of the indigenes by the Alaafin of Oyo,
Oba Lamidi Adeyemi 111, through his goons, the acts of which have
remained unchecked and un-investigated by the Nigerian State in spite of
all known legal processes to cause the State to do so,” Messrs. Oluokun and Ishola wrote in the petition to The Hague, dated September 9, 2015.
“So if Oba Adeyemi 111 is too big for Nigeria state to be
investigated and brought to book, the ICC is our last hope to stymie the
criminal tendencies of his and restore the hope that nobody is above
the law.”
In its letter signed by Head of the Information & Evidence Unit, Office of the Prosecutor, M.P. Dillon, ICC said: “The
Office is analyzing the situation identified in your communication,
with the assistance of other related communications and other available
information. Under Article 53 of the Rome Statute, the Prosecutor must
consider whether there is a reasonable basis to believe that crimes
within the jurisdiction of the Court have been committed, the gravity of
the crimes, whether national systems are investigating and prosecuting
the relevant crimes, and the interests of justice.
“As soon as a decision is taken on whether there is a reasonable
basis to proceed with an investigation, we will advise you promptly and
we will provide reasons for the decision.”
Among others, one of the annexures to the petitions to President
Buhari and the ICC was a letter from the Oyo State Commissioner of
Police to the Oyo Area Command dated September 19, 2009.
In the letter, the Commissioner directed his subordinate, that is the
Area Commander, to “please arrest the situation before it is too late
because the Alaafin intends to bomb the ancient city of Oyo”.
According to the letter, some of the places the Alaafin was suspected
to have planned to bomb during the 2009 Eid Kabir festival day included
Oloja’s palace and Isale Oyo praying ground, Sabo; Bizin illahi Estate;
and Unique Hotel where Elepe Iseke lived.
Accordingly, the suspected move of the Alaafin was “revealed by top members of the Tobalase group owned by the Alaafin of Oyo”.
Of the said Tobalse group, a report by the State Security Services,
claimed the group was founded by the Al;aafin “originally to oust the
Baale Ago Oja, hence the location of their base contiguous to both
Ashipa’s residence and the market of Isale-Oyo”.
“The group has included in their activities harassment and
intimidation of perceived enemies of the monarch within the three (3)
LGAs in Oyo,” the report added.
The SSS report also mentioned murder cases of a chief Rashidi Adebayo
Salami popularly called Atingisi (February 15, 2009) and that of a
Medical Doctor, Ogunniyi (December, 2005) who was said to have been
involved in a land dispute with his former lover and later, Alaafin’s
wife, Yetunde Adeyemi.
The report alleged that the murders were carried out by the Tobalase group, allegedly founded by Mr. Adeyemi.
Meanwhile, the head of the Tobalase group, Mojeed Agbaje, now
estranged from the Alaafin, has said in video clip circulated in compact
disc and available on YouTube, that the Oyo monarch indeed instructed
him to carry out nefarious activities, including murder.
On March 14, 2014, Mr. Agbaje deposed to an affidavit at the High
Court of Oyo State, sitting in Ibadan, “confirming the contents of the
video CD.”
He swore “that the video CD made in Yoruba contains highlight of the
various activities I engaged in during my service to the Alaafin of Oyo,
His Royal Majesty, Oba Lamidi Olayiwola Adeyemi 111.”
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