By Ikeugonna Eleke
The Traditional Council of Ihite Community in Orumba South Local Government Area, which is the body responsible for the selection of a monarch in the community, has berated the President General of the community, Mr George Madu, for bypassing them to elect a traditional ruler.
The council said it was not part of the constitution of the community for an electoral college to be set up to elect a monarch.
During a meeting of the council last weekend, it said the constitution of the community, which, it said, Madu had long jettisoned, stipulated that only the Traditional Council and the executive of the town union had the power to come together to elect a new monarch.
The council members who met and spoke to the media during the meeting, included Sir Chief Dominic Ahamkonye; Chief Daniel Ifemkpa; Mr. Anudu Ephraim and Chief Geoffrey Okeke, and many others.
Speaking one after the other, the council members said it had never happened like that in the History of Ihite.
‘We were meeting with the town union executive for them to join us so that we can kick start the process of electing a new Igwe for the community since it’s been two years already that the last monarch died.
‘We were surprised that the PG set up what he called an electoral college and before long, they said they had selected a new traditional ruler for Ihite.
‘Where has it ever been heard that the election for a monarch was done without the input of the traditional council, or that the election was done outside Ihite? It is a shame that in what they called the election of a traditional ruler, women lined up to vote. Things are not done like that,’ the members of the traditional council lamented.
They called on the Governor, Prof Chukwuma Soludo, to discountenance the exercise and not to issue a certificate to the new monarch, Mr Timothy Ifurunwa.
Meanwhile, the President General who was accused of masterminding the process, Mr Madu, has dismissed the traditional council as a few disgruntled elements who were opposed to the progress of the community.