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Insecurity: Stakeholders Insist On Constitutional Role For Monarchs
Stakeholders have insisted that traditional rulers in the Niger Delta must be accorded constitutional powers, if government was to ensure the return of lasting peace and security to the volatile region.
The stakeholders also expressed regrets that the Federal Government has yet to implement any off the 16-point agenda submitted to it in 2016 as a way of finding lasting solutions to the challenges facing the Niger Delta region.
These were the consensus among resolutions adopted from findings and recommendations of its study in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, at the 2021 Niger Delta Dialogue (NDD).
The study focused on emerging threats aggravating insecurity in the Niger Delta.
This year’s study review on the NDD, an initiative of the Academic Associates PeaceWorks (AAPW), sponsored by the European Union (EU), focused on “Rethinking Synergy Between Traditional Rulers, Security Agencies, Government Officials and Civil Society in Returning Security to the Niger Delta”.
Highlighting fallouts of the study, one of the research coordinators, Dr. Tokpo Edward of the Federal University, Otuoke, said, “It was observed that the absence of constitutionally defined powers for the monarch significantly hinders traditional rulers’ role to maintain peace and security in their domains.
“Even when they are the first point of call among key actors when issues of insecurity crop up, the law doesn’t guarantee them security votes, no security cover, making them vulnerable to insecurity themselves.
“Some traditional rulers have been kidnapped or killed by hoodlums or cultists after providing intelligence report. There’s hardly any confidentiality when they give information to security operatives.
“On top of all that, the study revealed an emerging threat of undue politicisation of chieftaincy matters. Governors impose traditional rulers, make and unmake monarchs without regards to the tradition and customers guiding such stools.”
Responding to cases of governors and officeholders denigrating monarchs and their stools, Cross River State monarch rom Ugep, Obol Ofem Ubana Eteng, vowed, “If you come to my palace to insult me, your car will not start as you leave.
“If you insult me or try as much to denigrate or dismiss me from a throne bestowed on me by people, customs, tradition and God, you will not complete your tenure.”
The Chairman, Cross River State Traditional Rulers Council, Dr. Etim Okon Edet, said, “Government has become a meddlesome interloper in chieftaincy affairs. Kingship is
By: Susan Serekara-Nwikhana
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