ABUJA — The Court of Appeal has restrained Osun State Governor Ademola Adeleke from removing Oba Olalekan Akadiri, the Akirun of Ikirun, from his throne. The restraining order was issued pending the determination of an appeal filed by the monarch. The development was confirmed in a court order published on Monday.
Oba Akadiri has been at the centre of a protracted chieftaincy dispute in Ikirun, the headquarters of Ifelodun Local Government Area. Governor Adeleke’s administration had moved to depose the monarch as part of what officials described as a resolution of long-standing succession disputes in the town.
However, the Court of Appeal ruled that the status quo must be maintained while the appeal is being heard. The court said removing a traditional ruler in the middle of active litigation would cause irreversible harm and prejudice the appeal process.
Oba Akadiri’s legal team welcomed the ruling. The monarch’s lead counsel said the court’s intervention protects the integrity of the traditional institution and prevents an unconstitutional removal from taking place before the law has had its say.
The Ikirun Chieftaincy Dispute
The Akirun chieftaincy dispute in Ikirun has deep historical and political roots. Multiple ruling houses have competing claims to the throne. State governments in Osun have intervened in the dispute on multiple occasions over several decades, with different administrations backing different claimants at different times.
The current dispute intensified after Governor Adeleke took office. His administration’s handling of chieftaincy matters across Osun State has been a source of significant controversy. Critics say the governor has used chieftaincy appointments and depositions to reward political allies and punish opponents.
Furthermore, traditional ruler politics in Osun are closely intertwined with electoral politics. Chiefs and their communities command significant influence over how their followers vote. A governor who controls chieftaincy appointments has a degree of political leverage that extends well beyond symbolic royal matters.
Broader Implications
The Court of Appeal’s restraining order is significant because it signals judicial willingness to check executive overreach in chieftaincy matters. Nigerian governors have historically enjoyed wide discretion in handling traditional ruler appointments and depositions, with courts rarely intervening in what they consider internal state matters.
However, legal precedents are slowly changing this dynamic. Constitutional provisions protecting citizens from arbitrary deprivation of rights have been increasingly applied to traditional rulers who challenge removal orders in court. The Ikirun case may add to this growing body of precedent.
The appeal will be heard in the coming weeks. Governor Adeleke’s legal team is expected to contest the restraining order and argue that the state government has both the constitutional authority and the legal basis to determine chieftaincy appointments within its territory.
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