Ekiti indigenes kick against Fayemi’s choice of LCDA headquarters

Kayode Fayemi

Ekiti traditional rulers invoke ancestral spirit over LCDA headquarters

Aiyede-Ekiti, a community in Oye Local Government Area, Ekiti State, has protested the omission of its name as the headquarter of the newly-created Local Council Development Area (LCDA) by Governor Kayode Fayemi.

The community addressed a news conference on Monday in Ado-Ekiti, and distributed a document titled: “Aiyede-Ekiti Rejects It Omission from the Newly Created LCDA Headquarters in Ekiti”.

The National President of Aiyede Progressive Union (APU), Dr. Ayo Ajayi, said the community had all it could take to be named a headquarter of LCDA.

Ajayi described as unfair, the decision by Gov. Kayode Fayemi to subdue Aiyede, the third largest community in Oye LGA under a smaller community.

Isan-Ekiti, which, according to APU had less social, political, and economic viability, was named the LCDA headquarter.

However, the State Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Olawale Fapohunda, who spoke on behalf of the state government, said the secretariat of the LCDA Committee confirmed the receipt of the APU petition.

He advised the petitioners to be patient as their petition was being considered along with several others.

“A decision will be made this week. Please wait for Government’s decision,” he said.

The Ekiti LCDA bill was passed by the Ekiti House of Assembly on Aug. 4, and signed into law on Aug. 6, by Gov. Kayode Fayemi.

But the community said that in an amazing twist of historical facts, Aiyede-Ekiti, which was the headquarters of Aiyede District in 1936 was obviously omitted from the new LCDA headquarters.

“Aiyede-Ekiti people and the majority of the towns in the district had already agreed on the naming of the Ifesowapo LCDA with its headquarters in Aiyede-Ekiti.

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“The current government’s action of relegating Aiyede-Ekiti to the background is quite provoking.

“We have all it takes and we deserve an LCDA’s headquarter,” Ajayi said.

The association’s president added that although the governor had sited the Ifesowapo LCDA’s headquarters in his hometown, Isan-Ekiti, he suggested that something be done to right the wrong.

He said the community would continue to pursue its demand in a peaceful manner, adding that “the cost of peace is quite cheaper than the cost of war.”

Ajayi appealed to the governor to reconsider his position and create a new LCDA for Aiyede-Ekiti.

He, however, clarified that the town was not in any way asking for the removal of the one already sited at Isan-Ekiti, but insisted that the governor had to be fair to them.

Speaking in the same vein, the home-based president of the union, Chief Kayode Adetifa, said Aiyede-Ekiti was not treated well.

He queried why the town, which was the administrative home of the British rulers in history should be subdued under communities it once ruled over.

The youths leader in the community, Adeoye Omotoso, and Chief Joseph Alabi, the Otunba Seriki of Aiyede-Ekiti, said the community totally rejected the current position.

They argued that it made them subject to a smaller community that was not politically, socially, and economically viable like theirs, describing it as an abomination.

They added that the town had been a center of development and industrialization before 1955 when a dam and Gede Farm settlement, as well as many educational institutions, were established in it.

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