The News
Agency of Nigeria gathered that Oba Falabi was taken into safety by military
personnel who rescued the king from the mob who were on a mission to forcefully
evict him.
Mob reportedly attacked and chased away Oba Olatunde Falabi, the Akire of Ikire on Monday, following the Supreme Court’s ruling.
Earlier, some
youths protested the non-implementation of a Supreme Court judgement which
declared Oba Falabi’s continued stay the throne as illegal.
SP Opalola
Yemisi confirmed the development to newsmen and added that no life was lost
during the incident.
The battle
for the throne had started in 1987 after the demise of the former traditional
ruler, Oba Oseni Oyegunle.
When the
process of appointing a new monarch started, one of the five ruling houses,
Aketula, presented a candidate, Mr Tajudeen Olanrewaju, in line with the Akire
of Ikire Chieftaincy Declaration of 1958.
Before the
process of Olanrewaju’s installation could be completed, two ruling houses,
Ladekan and Lanbeloye, went to court to challenge the inclusion of Aketula in
the ruling houses.
An Ile-Ife
High Court, Ile-Ife, where the matter was instituted, consequently stopped
Olanrewaju’s installation as the monarch, while the incumbent, Oba Olutunde
Falabi, was installed in May 1993.
Even though
he lost at the Appeal Court, Ibadan, Olanrewaju proceeded to the Supreme Court.
The Supreme
Court, in its judgment on April 11, 2014, affirmed that Aketula was one of the
ruling houses, as provided in the 1958 Akire of Ikire Chieftaincy Declaration.
The Supreme
Court also held that in view of the evidence on record, “it shows that the 1958
Declaration, in respect of the Akire of Ikire Chieftaincy stool, has not been
amended or repealed.’’
Following the
judgment, the incumbent monarch approached an Osun High Court, praying it to
restrain the state government from deposing him because he had not committed
any offence warranting his removal.
He also
pleaded with the court to restrain the state governor, the Commissioners for
Justice, Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, from deposing him while his
incumbency subsisted.
Justice
Abdulkareem of Osun High Court, in his judgment of June 29, 2020, however, said
that Falabi could no longer occupy the stool, based on the 1958 Akire
Declaration and the rotational procedure contained therein.

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