Benin Monarch throws weight behind anti-human trafficking fight, as Obaseki inaugurates Traditional Council

• Says 2-year jail term awaits fake kings, chiefs

The Benin Monarch, Omo N’Oba N’Edo Uku Akpolokpolo, Oba Ewuare II, as well as the Edo State Traditional Council has thrown his weight behind the fight against illegal migration and human trafficking, which have claimed the lives of thousands of Edo youths.

The Oba who spoke yesterday during the inauguration of the Edo State Council of Traditional Rulers and Chiefs by the state Governor, Godwin Obaseki, condemned the act and expressed disappointment in the Nigerian Embassy in Libya and the Libyan Government for their inability to tackle the crisis.

He said it was particularly frustrating that it had to take a news report by the Cable News Network (CNN) for the government and other stakeholders to respond to the crisis.

The Benin Monarch said the crisis could have been better managed if the relevant authorities lived up to their roles, instead of allowing it to fester. He commended the governor for his efforts at resettling and reintegrating the Libyan returnees through various skills acquisition programmes.

Inaugurating the traditional council, Obaseki expressed his gratitude to the Benin monarch and the other traditional rulers for their support for his administration since his inauguration in November last year.

He said as an advisory body, his administration would continue “to consult the council on a wide range of issues from time to time, and advised that a two-year jail term awaits any person that purports to create a traditional ruler title or any title purporting same to be traditional ruler title.”

The governor explained that “this council is in accordance with the Traditional Rulers and Chiefs Law No. 16 of 1979 as amended by law No. 2 of 1993. Membership of this all-important council is as provided for in Section 40 (2) a-d of the Amended Law No. 2 of 1993 with the Oba of Benin not only as Chairman but as the Paramount Traditional Ruler as provided for in Section 2 of the Amended Law No. 2 of 1993.”

He assured the state that his administration would continue to partner the traditional council in the areas of law, order and security, stemming the tide of illegal migration, environmental sanitation, registration of Edo citizens and in the mobilisation of indigenes and residents of the state to participate in government policies and programmes, settlement of land disputes, agriculture, among others.

Obaseki further said the support of the traditional council would be needed in health programmes, and urged them to sensitise people in their areas of jurisdiction to be alive to their civic duties such as the payment of taxes and voter registration exercise.

He added that the various institutional reforms being implemented in the state have started yielding results as internally generated revenues by local councils have increased by 500 percent, from N30 million in November 2016, to N150 million in November this year.

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