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| Alaafin Owoade I |
The emergence of His Royal Majesty, Oba (Dr.) Sefiu Olawale Oyebola Adeyeri III, Ajirotutu I, the Aseyin of Iseyinland, as Chairman of the Oke-Ogun Traditional Council is a welcome and historic development. It marks a quiet but important reawakening in Oke-Ogun one that signals readiness to participate fully in the traditional and political architecture of Oyo State. Yet, let us not confuse progress with completion, this is a step forward, not the finish line.
If the permanent chairmanship of the Oyo State Council of Obas could be disengaged from the Alaafin in the name of a new order and modern civilisation, then whatever replaced it must be anchored on balance, fairness, and clear equity among the state’s notable regions. Reform without fairness merely rearranges imbalance.
This is where fundamental questions arise. By what yardstick was the rotational arrangement designed such that Ogbomosho was accommodated ahead of Oke-Ogun? Was it population, historical depth, number of local governments, or political convenience? If local government spread is the benchmark, the facts are plain: Ibadan has eleven local governments, Oke-Ogun has ten, Ogbomosho has five, and Oyo town has four. On no rational scale does Oke-Ogun rank behind Ogbomosho in relevance or size.
Other states have resolved this dilemma with maturity. Ogun State’s rotational model among the Ijebu, Remo, Egba, and Yewa blocs demonstrates that equity strengthens unity rather than weakens tradition. Oyo State must borrow from this ideology if it is truly committed to transparency, fairness, and inclusion.
Any Oba who emerges as Chairman of the Oke-Ogun Traditional Council should, by logic and justice, be integrated into the rotational chairmanship of the Oyo State Council of Obas. Oke-Ogun cannot continue to operate at the margins of a structure it significantly sustains.
Yes, it is acknowledged that the Aseyin of Iseyin currently serves as the Secretary of the Oyo State Council of Obas. That position is noted and respected but it is not the destination, Oke-Ogun cannot be permanently confined to administrative support roles. We cannot be the permanent secretary of a council where others rotate leadership. Just as we are perpetually assigned the deputy governor position in the political sphere, we must reject the idea that our destiny is to always play second fiddle in systems we collectively built.
His Royal Majesty, Oba (Dr.) Sefiu Olawale Oyebola Adeyeri is a bold, intelligent, and forward-thinking monarch, fully equipped for higher responsibility. Supporting his inclusion in the rotational chairmanship is not about ego or entitlement ! it is about dismantling an unwritten rule that quietly limits Oke-Ogun’s ascent.
Beyond structure lies dignity. At the Oyo State at 50 celebrations, many could not ignore how revered Obas were treated like second-class citizens in a state their forebears fought to establish. These are ancient thrones, custodians of history, land, and identity. To sideline them today is to disrespect the very foundation of Oyo State.
This moment calls for collective resolve. Oke-Ogun indigenes must assert their rightful place in the scheme of things. Our representatives in the Oyo State House of Assembly must remember that representation is not passive, they must stand up for their region as a bloc, not as isolated individuals, and abandon the comfort of rubber-stamp politics.
Indeed, there is an urgent need to call them home, for briefing, for alignment, and for accountability on this issue.
Balancing governance is not an act of confrontation, it is an act of justice. What is good for one must be good for all, a rotational chairmanship that excludes Oke-Ogun is neither progressive nor civilised, it is simply unfair.
Oke-Ogun has waited long enough, this is the time to stop standing beside the table and start sitting at it.
Akinwale Atepe writes from Abeokuta.

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