- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
A Prefatory Statement On Challenge From Itsekiri Leaders' Forum To the Publication of British Treaties With Urhobo Communities In Warri and Their Significance For the Dispute On "Ownership" Of Warri
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
A Prefatory Statement On Challenge From Itsekiri
Leaders' Forum To the Publication of British Treaties With Urhobo Communities
In Warri and Their Significance For the Dispute On "Ownership" Of
Warri
By
Editorial and Management Committee
URHOBO HISTORICAL SOCIETY
In most respects, Warri is a unique city. Once a small
and pleasant colonial township, it has grown into a huge megalopolis whose
troublesome physical atmosphere makes it one of the most polluted metropoles on
our earth. Warri City was a creation of British colonialism in Nigeria. Before
British colonial rule in its territory at the beginning of the 1890s, the lands
that are now known as Warri City were made up of various towns and villages
belonging to Ijaw, Itsekiri, and Urhobo ethnic communities. Sitting at the
conjuncture of the three ethnic groups, Warri City encompasses traditional
farming towns and villages of the Urhobo as well as Ijaw and Itsekiri fishing
villages and communities that have grown into one other. These developments have arisen because
British colonial rulers made Warri the headquarters of one of their Provinces.
Moreover, in the post-colonial period, Warri, an Atlantic seaport, emerged as a
principal shipping venue for Nigeria's booming petroleum oil products. Its
landed properties have consequently become extremely valuable.
Along with such urban and economic developments have
persisted disputes on the "ownership" of Warri. These disputes date
back to the early decades of the last century when British colonial rule was
fresh and relied on Political Agents, an office and a class that died out as
British colonialism progressed. One of the most colourful and controversial
Political Agents in Southern Nigeria was an Itsekiri chieftain whose name was
Dore Numa. Chief Dore Numa dominated the affairs of the new colonial Warri
Province for more than three decades. In this period, the British relied on his
friendship. They also rewarded him handsomely, although towards the end of his
career in the late 1920s, the British appeared ready to make other choices. In
these years, Ijaw and Urhobo communities in Warri accused Chief Dore Numa of
taking their lands. They took him to court. Uniformly, they lost against this
friend of the British, leading them to accuse the British of bias and
complicity in what they regarded as theft of their lands.
These cases dragged on into the post-Numa years.
However, the tide of victories turned in the post-Numa era. The first dramatic
reversal was in the dispute of "ownership" of the sister colonial
township of Sapele. Buoyed by Chief Numa's victories in Warri, Itsekiri
chieftains claimed that Sapele was "owned" by their King. The local
Okpe families and community in Sapele, with help from Chief Mukoro Mowoe and
Urhobo Progress Union, were able to establish that their Urhobo ancestors
founded Urhiapele, whose name was subsequently corrupted by the British to
Sapele. Even a colonial court in 1941
found in favour of the Okpe-Urhobo community against Itsekiri claims of royal
ownership, a celebrated judgement that was confirmed in all courts that
considered this case of "ownership" of Sapele. In the post-colonial
era, Urhobo litigants in Warri won a decisive case in resurrected disputes of
"ownership" of areas of Warri. In the celebrated case brought against
the late Chief Daniel Okumagba by Itsekiri chieftains, the Warri High Court in
a 1974 judgement, subsequently confirmed in Nigeria's Supreme Court, deposed
the theory of royal overlordship on which the Numa victories were won. In
settling Suit No. W/48/68, the Warri High
Court ruled that (a) the ancestors of the people of Okere-Urhobo, namely,
Idama, Owhotemu, and Sowhoruvbe founded Okere; (b) the Itsekiri King's domain did not extend to
Okere; and (c) the Itsekiri King's over-lordship rights did not extend to
Okere.
In one of the most perceptive analyses of this agonizing dispute over
Warri, a fair-minded Yoruba man has put the dispute in historical, political,
and legal contexts in a fashion that will make sense to those who are far away
from Warri and who are not inundated with the propaganda that has accompanied
this dispute. Please read Akindele Aiyetan's powerful summary of the dispute
over the "ownership" of Warri. He writes:
So, who owns Warri? The Itsekiri claim that Ginuwa I
founded Warri in 16th century; the Urhobo claim that they had founded and lived
in Warri before the 16th century. To a dispassionate observer, the former claim
would sound implausible because the Itsekiri king (known as Olu of Itsekiri
until 1952) did not move into the present Warri until 1952, when the late Chief
Obafemi Awolowo rewarded the Itsekiri for their votes in the 1952 general
elections by changing the title of the Olu of Itsekiri to Olu of Warri and
establishing an Itsekiri Communal Land Trust over Warri, with the Olu as the president
or chairman. The Urhobo went wild with rage and, and as law-abiding citizens,
went straight to the court to cause the Olu to revert to his original title
and/or at least to change the name of the Province from Warri to Delta. They
failed and won: failed to get the title of Olu of Warri to revert to Olu of
Itsekiri but succeeded in getting the name of the Province to change from Warri
to Delta Province. But the seed of inter-tribal conflicts had been sown, I dare
say, by the South-West and was watered by the South West until 1976, when the
Supreme Court, the apex court of the land, pronounced its judgement on the
contending claims to Warri: A group of prominent Itsekiri chiefs -- D. O.
Idundun, P. O. Awani, A. E. Hesse, C. A. Lorie, J. D. Oruru (for themselves and
on behalf of Ogitsi family of Okere, Warri), the Itsekiri Communal Land
Trustees and Erejuwa II, the Olu of Warri (for himself and on behalf of the
Itsekiri people) -- had sued Daniel Okumagba (an Urhobo, for himself and on
behalf of Olodi, Oki and Ighogbadu families of Idimisobo, Okere Warri) over
ownership of Warri. The plaintiffs (the Itsekiri) claimed against the Urhobo
(the defendants), that the defendants had forfeited their rights of user and/or
occupation and any other rights in the area in dispute and [and prayed for] an
order of injunction to restrain the defendants, their servants and/or agents
from entering the land in dispute.
As far as those of us, spectators, were and are
concerned, so much depended or should depend on the ruling of the Supreme
Court. In a landmark judgement, the apex court, exhibiting erudition, handed
its decision to the litigants. Quoting with approval, the opinion of the lower
court presided by Mr. Justice Ekeruche, the Supreme Court said:
"Considering the traditional evidence in
the case, my view of that aspect of the evidence in plaintiff's case whereby
plaintiffs have sought to establish that the land in dispute and even also
Okere Village were part of the kingdom founded by Ginuwa I and also their evidence
that Ogitsi owned the whole of Okere land including the land in dispute in this
case is that it is UNCONVINCING..." (1976, 9 & 10 SC, 227 @ 229.)
Continuing, the learned Justices said:
"The
plaintiffs say that Ginuwa I founded a kingdom and that before Ekpen (an
Urhobo) came to Okere the area of Okere was or would be part of that kingdom.
There is no evidence of the extent or area covered by that kingdom, nor is
there any evidence going to show any act or acts in history which made the area
of the kingdom founded by Ginuwa I before Ekpen (the Urhobo man ) came
there..." (Ibid @ p230).
The Itsekiri case against the Urhobo suffered a stroke
when the learned justices of the Supreme Court further stated that:
"The
evidence in plaintiff's case only shows that Ginuwa I when he was trying to
make a settlement after leaving Benin got as far as Ijalla where he ultimately
settled, lived, died and was buried. There is not evidence in plaintiff's case
going to show that in the process of making his settlement or kingdom he or any
persons under him settled anywhere beyond Ijalla and towards or in Okere"
(ibid).
The learned trial judge in the lower court had stated:
"I do not believe that any kingdom founded by Ginuwa I extended to Okere.
Plaintiffs' evidence and also evidence in the whole case do not prove such
extent of any kingdom founded by Ginuwa I..." (ibid). The Supreme Court
agreed with this statement.
The disputes over Warri among the three ethnic groups
have not, unfortunately, been restricted to legal interpretation. Politics and
violence have accompanied the claims of the three ethnic groups. From the 1950s
up to our own times, politics and violence have beclouded the issues of the
disputes and rival claims over the City of Warri by the Urhobo, Itsekiri, and
Ijaw. They sadly escalated into a mini-war between the Itsekiri and the Ijaw
from 1999 to 2001.
PATTERNS IN CLAIMS OF OWNERSHIP OF WARRI BY IJAW,
ITSEKIRI, AND URHOBO
There are clear patterns in these multi-ethnic
disputes on the ownership of Warri that should be highlighted. First, there is
heavy weight placed on the opinions rendered by early colonial officers.
Contacts that seemed to confer recognition of ownership have also been pressed
by all three sides. In general, each of these groups had its own favourite
British colonial officers who sometimes adopted the views of the ethnic groups
with which they were friendly. Sometimes, one ethnic group's favourite colonial
officer was the other's villain. While
the Itsekiri. have invoked Chief Dore Numa's contacts with British colonial
officers as clear evidence that the British recognized their
"ownership" of Warri, local Urhobos in Warri inveigh against such
contacts as an embodiment of corruption and oppression of British colonialism.
The best illustration of this type of crossed valuation of a British officer is
the case of T. D. Maxwell. Maxwell was the Judge who, in 1925, presided over
the case brought against Dore Numa by the Urhobo community in Warri accusing
Numa of having surreptitiously leased their lands to the British without their
knowledge. Maxwell said very harsh things about the Urhobo litigants, virtually
making it a personal matter. Years later, Daniel Obiomah, an Urhobo native of
the local Warri community, who had good education at the University College,
Ibadan, and became a District Officer under the colonial era, dug up stunning
information about T. D. Maxwell. In Obiomah's own words: "T.D. Maxwell,
Puisne Judge, who in 1925 set the ball
rolling at the Warri High Court of first instance in Ogegede v. Dore Numa was
the same T.D. Maxwell, Commissioner of Lands in 1906 App. 3 when the leases,
the cause of action, were concluded. Thus he was presiding over his own
actions. It was the age of British jingoism, trickery, and truculence." Such strong condemnation of T. D. Maxwell's
conduct from a prominent Urhobo spokesman is in sharp contrast to the
near-adulation of T. D. Maxwell in Itsekiri historiography.
Second, there has been heavy reliance on legal cases
that favour one side against the other in the multi-ethnic disputes on the
ownership of Warri. In the Ugbajo Itsekiri's presentation in 1999 to the United
States Department of State on the matter of Itsekiri dispute with the Ijaw,
legal cases won by the Itsekiri during Dore Numa's era, under early British
colonial rule, were brilliantly packaged as clear evidence that the Itsekiri
owned Warri. Importantly, there is a menu of such cases, including Ogegede vs
Numa, which the Itsekiri won against Urhobos in colonial times, that have been
published as evidence of Itsekiri ownership of Warri. On the other hand, those
who advocate that Urhobos do own a share of Warri have cited more recent cases
which favour the Urhobo community in Warri. For instance, Chief Benjamin
Okumagba's assertions on his people's ownership of central Warri is based on
the post-Independence legal case that was won by an Urhobo community in the
heart of Warri against Itsekiri claims of ownership of Warri.
Third, there is an incredible amount of weight
attached to the words and views of academic historians and social scientists in
this dispute. Every side to the controversy over the ownership of Warri has spent a good amount of time reading and
citing views that academics have written, even as tentative statements of
positions that they were prospecting. Genuine academics must wonder why these
contestants over ownership of Warri regard academic statements as the hallmark
of truth. Some of these people who are cited as authorities on Warri did not
even visit Warri. Some of them were merely narrating information that they were
told. Two of these academics, who did visit Warri, have been quoted ad nauseam,
by all sides to this dispute. Professor Obaro Ikime's books on the Niger Delta
have been savaged by numerous contestants in search of phrases, sentences, or
suggestions that might appear to favour one side against the other in the fight
over the ownership of Warri. Obaro Ikime has devoted his academic career to the
cause of the Western Niger Delta and must be agonized that his views are being
stretched in vain attempts to claim the ownership of Warri which, we are sure,
he believes belongs to all western Niger Deltans. The other scholar whose
articles have been mined in search of claims of ownership of Warri is a man of
enormous integrity and reserve who would be wary about making the one-sided
claims that are now attributed to him in the propaganda warfare over the
emotional issue of the ownership of Warri. Now a grand retired Professor
Emeritus from the University of Sussex, Professor Peter Lloyd, who was Peter
Ekeh's teacher at the University of Ibadan in the early 1960s, must be amused, probably agonized, that he is
regarded as an oracle in the matter of who owns the City of Warri.
What makes the problem of the contest over the
ownership of Warri so very very intriguing is that "ownership" has
various meanings to the different sides to this dispute. For the local Urhobo
communities in Warri, ownership of Warri is about their ancestral lands. In
their sense, the lands over which there is dispute are the properties of
families, not the entire community, let alone the entire Urhobo people. This is
also the meaning to a limited extent in the case of the Ijaw whose old Warri
families point to their areas of origin in the troubled city. Itsekiri families
who hail from Warri share in such local definition of ownership of Warri. However, the dominant Itsekiri meaning of
ownership of Warri is vastly different from the Urhobo meaning. From the point
of view of the official Itsekiri meaning of "ownership" in this
dispute, Warri is owned by the King of Itsekiri -- in a sense that is close to
the pre-modern meaning of the ownership of towns and cities, or even of the
state, in Medieval Europe. In many instances, the contestants talk past one
other in this confusion of meanings of "Who owns Warri?" Indeed, the
very use of the singular, instead of the more democratic plural of "Who
Own Warri?," suggests a Medieval cast to this dispute on the ownership of
Warri. Those in the Urhobo community in Warri who complain of the conduct of
some Itsekiri chieftains whose original homes are in Benin River, but now claim
Warri as their home, totally miss the official Itsekiri meaning of what the
ownership of Warri conveys in this dispute. This is a confusion of meanings of
"ownership" that has pitched a minority Urhobo community in Warri
against a self-conscious Itsekiri aristocratic group that insists that royal
ownership of Warri lands confers a degree of lordship on their good selves.
There is a second twist in the meaning of ownership in
the dispute concerning those who own Warri. The claims of ownership by Urhobo
and Ijaw communities in Warri are limited. That is, they do not exclude
ownership of portions of Warri by other communities -- Itsekiri, Ijaw, or
Urhobo. On the other hand, the official Itsekiri claim is absolutist. No other
ethnic group, other than the Itsekiri, can lay any claims to any portions of
Warri. This is so because all of it is the King's land. It is thus left for
those disputing such absolutist claim to show that the King of Itsekiri does
not own the lands of Warri. Sometimes, sadly, the dispute is headed in that
Medieval direction.
URHOBO HISTORICAL SOCIETY'S INTRODUCTION OF
BRITISH "TREATIES OF PROTECTION" IN THE
WESTERN NIGER DELTA
The manner in which the Warri dispute has been
discussed has encouraged a degree of obscurantism in our historical
scholarship, in the Niger Delta, which is troubling in our modern times. Long
series of court cases are cited in a rapid order of presentation, with every
assurance that no one will be able to have access to such obscure legal
documents. Fragments of old writers' thoughts have been splashed around in
efforts to win favour for one's side of the dispute, when it is clear that such
out-of-print books will not be available to the readers who are being
confronted by these disputants. Ancient maps are cited when it is clear that
there is no chance whatsoever for any independent verification of their contents
by those who might be so inclined.
Urhobo Historical Society's self-imposed mandate is to
erase such obscurantism from the history of Urhoboland and that of the Western
Niger Delta. One way of doing so is to democratize our history. We do not see
any need why cited books and documents should be the preserve of a few
well-endowed men in an age in which the revolution of communication has made it
possible to publish such sources of information for maximum readership. We have
taken two steps in this effort. First, we have begun publishing books that are
out-of-print, or books that are not widely available, whose authors grant us
permission to publish them. We thank Chief Daniel Obiomah of Warri and
Professor Obaro Ikime, now a Reverend Minister in Ibadan, whose books we have
published in this scheme. We also thank Professor Samuel Erivwo, now a Reverend
Provost of the Anglican Diocese of Warri, whose books on religion in the
Western Niger Delta we will be publishing in the next several months.
We have extended these efforts to the reproduction of
British "Treaties of Protection" in the Western Niger Delta. We began
with the oldest of these treaties, namely, two with Itsekiri (1884 and 1894)
and those with the Urhobo communities in Warri. We have also reproduced the
oldest upland Urhobo treaty, namely the British Treaty with "Abrakar"
(1892). The editor of our Web sites has used his mature judgement in providing
introductions to these treaties. Two such introductions are relevant in this
presentation. One was for the Western Niger Delta and the other introduction
was for the Urhobo communities in Warri.
CHIEF J. O. S. AYOMIKE'S CRITIQUE OF
THE EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION TO THE TREATIES OF
PROTECTION
Chief J. O. S. Ayomike is an esteemed member of
Itsekiri leadership in contemporary times. He is more than a chieftain of
Itsekiri contemporary affairs. He is an historian of the Itsekiri past and an
advocate of contemporary Itsekiri causes who relies on his knowledge of the
Itsekiri past for his advocacy. As an advocate of Itsekiri causes, the matter
of Warri and the issue of the ownership of Warri are Chief Ayomike's strong
suites. He has thus been alerted to the treaties that we have posted in our Web
site, especially with regard to their significance for the issue of the
ownership of Warri. For ease of reference, we will reproduce the portion of the
Editorial Introduction to the "Protection Treaties" with Urhobo
communities in Warri that Chief Ayomike
has most trouble with. Here was what the Editorial Introduction said:
These standard treaties were printed in Great Britain
and carried to Urhobo lands by imperial agents. It is doubtful that those
Urhobo chiefs who signed these treaties, willingly or otherwise coerced, ever
knew that they were signing away their sovereignty. The first article is
thoroughly provocative. It claims that the agreement was being made at
"the request of the Chiefs and People" of these Urhobo communities.
In any case, they were the treaties that introduced British power into Urhoboland
from 1891 onwards. The Urhobo side of the treaties were clearly enforced.
What about the British commitments to protect the
Urhobo? Here the failures of these treaties become manifest. This is because
British imperial agents were cleverly scheming to escape the burden of these
treaties whenever their interests were threatened. The treaties clearly
recognized that the lands of the Urhobo signatories belonged to the Chiefs and
People of the communities that entered
into agreements with the British. Yet, a few short years later, the British
appointed their own Political Agent, Chief Dore Numa, who surreptitiously
leased Urhobo lands to the British in the absence of those with whom they
entered into agreements in the 1890s. Numa was an Itsekiri chieftain who had helped
the British to defeat his fellow Itsekiri strongman Nana Olomu. He also aided
the British to humiliate Binis and their King in the war of 1897. The British
rewarded Dore Numa handsomely, disregarding earlier treaties with Urhobos. This
breach of the spirit of the British treaties is the source of the inter-ethnic
conflicts that have ruined Warri City, even in our times.
Who Owns Warri?
One of the most vexed questions besieging the western
Niger Delta concerns the rival claims over ownership of the tri-ethnic City of
Warri. One value of these treaties is that they establish, beyond any shadow of
doubt, that in the 1890s the British regarded Warri as Urhobo country. The
batch of treaties reproduced in these pages were uniformly branded by the
British as treaties with "Sobo" communities in the "District of
Warri." By contrast, the early imperial treaties between the British and
the Itsekiri recognized the lands of the Itsekiri as lying in Benin River.
The subsequent Itsekiri attempt to wrestle Warri from
the ownership of Urhobos, with whose ancestors British imperial agents signed
treaties in the early 1890s, has arisen from the duplicity of British colonial
policies. The Itsekiri have sought to reap benefits from the largesse and
corruption that the British bestowed on the Itsekiri Chieftain, Dore Numa, by
ignoring these treaties and by resting on subsequent corrupt court judgements
in favor of Dore Numa, British colonialism's prime Political Agent in the
western Niger Delta.
Chief J. O. S. Ayomike has made many little mistakes
in his characterization of the Editorial Introduction. These need not delay us
here. However, Chief Ayomike makes two central contentions to which we should
refer briefly. One is that the editor of our Web site maliciously inserted
"Benin River" in the Itsekiri Treaties of 1884 and 1894. Actually,
the Chief is patently mistaken in his assertion. Both Treaties bear that
evidence. In the 1884 Treaty, "Benin" appears in the title (in the
first line) of the treaty and "Benin River" appears under the
notation following Article IX. In the 1894 Treaty, "Benin River"
boldly appears in the title of the Treaty and is repeated all over the Treaty.
Nowhere in these two treaties were their Itsekiri signatories or the interests
they represented associated with Warri.
Chief Ayomike's second central contention would be
amazing to anyone who is engaged in a fair-minded interpretation of the facts
of these "Treaties of Protection," which are posted in our Web site.
He says that the fact that the British recognized Warri District as the home of
the Urhobo communities who signed these "Protection Treaties" with
British agents in the early 1890s is of no historic value and should be of no
consequence. We wonder what the eminent Chief would claim if the Itsekiri
Treaties bore Warri, rather than Benin River, as the District of the Itsekiri.
Would he not say that that was proof positive that Warri was Itsekiri land? We
do understand that he is an advocate for Itsekiri causes. But we trust that he
is a fair-minded man who will understand that his statement stretches logic a
bit far, even in an impassioned dispute that is as long-standing as the matter
of the ownership of Warri.
THE MANDATE AND COMMITMENTS OF
URHOBO HISTORICAL SOCIETY FOR WARRI AND THE WESTERN
NIGER DELTA
We are delighted to learn from Chief J. O. S.
Ayomike's critique of our Chair and Editor that he is working for the welfare
of our region of Nigeria. We want to assure Chief Ayomike and other Members of
Itsekiri Leaders' Forum that all of us, including our Chair, Professor Peter
Ekeh, are committed to working for peace and justice in the Western Niger
Delta. We do not see any need for continued conflicts among the ethnic
communities in our region of Nigeria. We therefore applaud Chief Ayomike's
commitments. They tally with our mandate, which is to promote good relations
among all the ethnic nationalities in the Niger Delta.
We are aware that the matter of Warri is a touchy
subject for the Urhobo communities in Warri as well as for the Itsekiri people.
But we are convinced that with good will, a resolution of the problems that
have troubled inter-ethnic relations in Warri since the beginning of the last
century can be found. There need not be losers in such resolution. If Warri
affairs are well run, and it becomes a major area for enterprise, all sides
will gain from its prosperity. But we in Urhobo Historical Society must urge
that we all have a duty to seek to improve Urhobo and Itsekiri rural areas
which are today terribly endangered. While we quarrel over Warri, our rural
communities are dying. Our streams are drying up. Pollution is killing our
fishes, animals, and plants. Urhobo Historical Society urges that the Warri
problem may become easier to resolve if we do not all concentrate our attention
on this one city, to the utter neglect of Itsekiri and Urhobo rural areas. That
is our mandate. That is our commitment.
Original source: http://www.waado.org/
Comments
Post a Comment