
Kokori
is the country home of Delta suspected kidnap kingpin, Kelvin Oniarah,
arrested September 25, by a combined team of Department of State
Service, DSS, and the army, while staying in an hotel in Port-Harcourt,
Rivers State
. Like the Aba riots in which thousands of Igbo women congregated at the Native Administration centers in Calabar and Owerri as well as smaller towns to protest against the warrant chiefs and the taxes on the market women, Kokori women protested nudé (Eweya) , last weekend, demanding the withdrawal of soldiers on “internal security operation” from the community.
. Like the Aba riots in which thousands of Igbo women congregated at the Native Administration centers in Calabar and Owerri as well as smaller towns to protest against the warrant chiefs and the taxes on the market women, Kokori women protested nudé (Eweya) , last weekend, demanding the withdrawal of soldiers on “internal security operation” from the community.
The
women, angry that they were prevented from selling in the market,
penultimate Saturday, by soldiers who upturned their wares for allegedly
selling food items to the boys causing problem for the government, were
further infuriated by the report they received when they got home that
soldiers broke into the community shrine for the second time and
destroyed every object at sight even after the chief priest, Michael
Omonigho, had been taken into custody.
Citing
the schools in the community, health centre and markets that had been
forced to shut down because of the siege to the town by soldiers, who
accused of beating up their men, they embarked on a protest, and,
stunningly, they prevented soldiers from entering the town for several
hours on Monday.
Accusing
the soldiers of chasing away their husbands and desecrating their
custom and tradition, the women, acting on unconfirmed information that
soldiers wanted to demolish the Igban shrine, formed a human shield
around the shrine and prevented them from purportedly executing the
mission.
Caskets
in the palace They did not spare the leaders of the community, the
elite, led by their monarch, Ovie of Agbon Kingdom, Ogurime-Rime, Ukori
1, who they accused of looking the other way while the community was
under siege by agents of government and soldiers. Consequently, they
carried caskets and deposited them at the palace of the monarch and
homes of some prominent sons of the town.
Despite
the expressed wrath of Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan over the alleged
support they gave their suspected kidnapper- son, Kelvin, the women
maintained that the community was being marginalized as stated by the
alleged kidnap kingpin and asked the governor to develop Kokori. Women
emancipation! It is like the women are tired of the silence of their men
and have taken over the battle for the “liberation” of the town from
perceived enemies.
The
protest, which went wild, last weekend, started penultimate Saturday
when the women returned from the market angry that soldiers allegedly
came to upturn their wares, asking why they should sell food items to
Kelvin boys, who were fighting government. They went round the community
half nakéd raining cursés on the soldiers that night. The next day,
Sunday, the women were joined by members of Liberation Movement of
Urhobo People, formed by the alleged kingpin, last month, and they
really went fanatical.
Vandalized
property They allegedly broke into the monarch’s palace and vandalized
the citadel. The youths, who, penultimate Friday, only laid siege to the
palace and held the royal father, PDP senatorial candidate for
yesterday’s bye-election, Chief Emmanuel Aguariavwodo, and others
hostage, for more than one hour, broke into the palace this time around.
They
allegedly vandalized property of the monarch and the residence of a
member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Akpodiagaga Emeyese.
Emeyese, who was allegedly injured in the first attack on the palace,
broke his leg and has been hospitalized since then. The protesters
reportedly attacked a hotel belonging to Emeyese and other elite in the
town, saying they were the ones that gave Kelvin out to security agents
in Port-Harcourt, where he was reportedly arrested after he was tricked
there.
According
to a source, “Chanting songs of disenchantment with the portrait of the
Ovie of Agbon, HRM Ogurimerime Ukori I after placing a casket at the
palace gate, the women said the last thing they would tolerate was the
destruction of their shrine, declaring that ‘Egba’ shrine was as old as
Kokori town.”
Our
grouse – Spokesperson Spokes person of the protesters, Madam Irerevwo
Oyokoko, called for the release of Kelvin and the arrested chief priest,
Michael Omonigho, insisting that government should attend to his
(Kelvin) demand, instead of arresting him and terrorizing the entire
community with soldiers. Noting that indigenes of other communities in
the Niger Delta that carried arms against government were granted
amnesty, Oyokoko asked why Kelvin’s case was different.
It
took the intervention of the chairman of Ethiope-East for the women to
disperse last Sunday, having been assured by a top military officer, who
was on ground when the chairman addressed them that they would not
destroy the shrine. Running battle However, they regrouped on Monday and
built a wall around the shrine following a report that soldiers were
seen with motor-saws supposedly to hack down the tree, which form part
of the shrine.
March
On Tuesday, there was report that calm was gradually returning to the
community, but the situation changed, Wednesday, as the women,
maintaining their children no longer go to school and that soldiers were
worsening their plight, while government was not concerned by their
ordeal, but interested in uprooting anything Kelvin out of Kokori,
marched from the town to Isiokolo, the headquarters of the council on
foot to lodge a formal protest.
Led
by the oldest Kokori woman, they trooped to Isiokolo, drumming, dancing
and raining curses on their monarch who they accused of conspiracy. At
Isiokolo, where they met the Head of Personnel Management, Mr. William
Egbukuage, they repeated the call for the release of the chief priest of
the community’s shrine, saying he was not a juju priest for Kelvin and
his gang, as claimed by those who apprehended him.
They
told Egbukuage, who received them in the absence of the chairman of
council, that Kokori was indeed marginalized, as stated by the seized
alleged Delta kidnap kingpin, Kelvin. According to them, since 1961 when
oil production started in Kokori, the community has practically nothing
to show for it. They also called for the release of all the “innocent
farmers, traders and villagers” that were arrested by soldiers on their
way to the farm, market and other places.
Egbukuage
promised to deliver their message to the council chairman. Ghana
protest Meanwhile, Kokori people in Ghana, last Sunday, decried the
invasion of the community by the military under the guise of searching
for gang members of Kelvin, calling for withdrawal of the troops.
Leader
of the Kokori community in Ghana and public relations officer of Urhobo
Progress Union, UPU/ South-South community, Ghana, Mr. David Ukueku,
said the entire Kokori people in Ghana were incensed by the invasion.
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