From Njingang Godwin in Kumba
The population of Kombone Bakundu, a
village in Mbonge sub-division along the Kumba-Mundemba highway, was taken
aback last Monday when an irate crowd of youth invaded the village and set
ablaze the house of a certain Mesue Kingsley who is a municipal councillor of
Mbonge and aspirant to the throne of Kombone Bakundu.
According to independent observers in
the village, the root cause of the mob action dates back when chief Sakwe
Daniel of Kombone Bakunda past onto eternity. The late chief’s son, Eric Sakwe
Odza, had already been tipped to succeed him as traditional ruler.
Villagers told this reporter that following
a series of consultative talks held by the divisional officer for Mbonge, Sombe
Simon, it had been unanimously agreed by the king makers of Kombone that the
late chief’s son will succeed him until recently when Kingsley Esue also
indicated his willingness to take over the throne.
During one of the consultative meetings,
the DO is reported to have stressed on the respect of the 1972 chieftaincy law
which states partly: “...in a family where the chief has a successor, the
successor will take over the throne in his demise. But in a situation were there
is no successor, the king makers will then present candidate(s) who will later
be elected if more then one candidate is presented’’. As such, the DO sustained
that since the late chief had a son; it was but obvious for him to take over.
However, when the apparent heir to the
throne was presented, some of the king makers protested and formed a pro-Kingsley
Esue camp.
Worthy of note is the fact that some villagers
accused Kingsley Esue of not having even a plot in the village and living in a
house which he rented. As such, the group of aggrieved villagers say the
‘stranger’ can not be their chief.
Some of the youth who are accusing the civil
administrator of not applying the law, faulted the DO for allowing the king
makers to go in voting when the choice of successor had already been arrived
at.
To make matters worse, Kinsley is said
to have been boastfully parading the village with a prefectural order, claiming
he was merely waiting for installation. Some elites of the village who beg not
to be named said some overzealous politicians in Mbonge were using their
financial power to see that Kingsley is crowned chief of a village many say he
knows nothing about.
Against this backdrop, the angry youths
stormed the rented apartment of Kingsley Mesue and reduced it to nothing while
chanting songs bearing the message: “He is a stranger and can not be chief”.
Amidst these flaring tempers, all
attempts by this report to get the reaction of the ‘purported chief-to-be’
proved futile. When we tried to accost Mesue, he was very busy, filing a
complaint to Meme SDO.
In the mean time, it is not yet clear if
Kingsley has given up the fight for the throne now that he is homeless. But the
heir apparent, Sakwe Eric has vowed not to give up the throne.
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