Friday 21 March 2014

Facts behind the recurring Warri crises (Part 3)

(V)       THE POST DORE NUMA ERA.

In 1927 the Itsekiri mooted the end of the interregnum which started in 1848. They wished for an Olu to be installed. But the colonial government would not hear of it. To them Chief Dore was Olu hence no Olu could be appointed until after Dore's death. On Dore's death in 1932, he had to be succeeded by the new Itsekiri Council for Itsekiri affairs while deliberations went on culminating in the installation of Ginuwa II, Olu of Itsekiri in 1936. The Itsekiris had asked, and the colonial government had refused, notwithstanding all that had gone before, to style the Olu, Olu of Warri. The refusal of the British to style the monarch Olu of Warri instead of Olu of Itsekiri is not far-fetched. The British created Dore and introduced the concept of overlordship which was alien to the indigenous communities and there was a limit the British could go propagating and entrenching the overlordship concept after the demise of Dore. The Secretary Southern Provices' Office recalling the situation wrote that:

"it appears by no means certain that the Jekris have been disposed to take full advantage of the Privy Council decision; or that they have been encourage to do so" because in the opinion of the Lt. Governor now Sir William Hunt, "the Jekris rights as 'overlords' of the area "are still governed by native law and custom"

A new Olu was appointed in 1936 as Ginuwa II. The descendants of Erejuwa I to which Dore claimed maternal descent had been excluded. The choice was not even open to all the descendants of Akengbuwa, the last Olu before the interregnum. It was limited to the descendants of Ejo, the man to have succeeded Akengbuwa.
In 1936 one Edema Arubi purporting to be acting for the Olu of Itsekiri, Ginuwa II addressed two petitions to His Excellency the Governor, Sir Bernard Bourdillon and to the Honourable, the Chief Secretary to the Government requesting that the Olu be made a first class chief and that his title be changed to Olu of Warri. The Acting Secretary, Southern Provinces, Enugu, commented inter alia to the Chief Secretary to the Government reference S.P.11328/213 of 14th May, 1936.

"During a recent visit to Warri His Honour was told by the Honourable Mr. A. Egbe that he and other Itsekiri leaders of the progressive element were seriously perturbed at the influence which Mr. Edema Arubi held or was attempting to hold over the Olu and elder members of the Itsekiri Council, and with the reactionary advice which Mr. Arubi was giving them….. He is, they say, advising the Olu to persit in claims to zerainty over Sobos and Ijohs, which as Mr. Egbe points out, is a claim which the Itsekiri people themselves realise they cannot sustain. The more the Olu claims in this respect the more determined are the Sobos to free themselves from all possibility of domination by the Olu as they were dominated in the past by Chief Dore."

The Acting Secretary, Southern Provices, considered that Mr. Edema Arubi had no authority to make his requests and continued:

"In any event, were the request to come from the Olu and Council His Honour would not recommend them… As regards the second request, Warri is the largest town in Itsekiri land, but it is comparatively recent. There is no historical claim to the title Olu of Warri and Warri is a township over which the Olu has no administrative control. The Warri lands have been for many years a bone of contention between Itsekiris and Sobos. The recent Privy Council decision adjudged the land not to be Sobo - and the claim to be "Olu of Warri" is made to flaunt this before the Sobos." - CSO File No. 54176.

Premised on the foregoing, the request to convert from Olu of Itsekiri to Olu of Warri was declined by the British who knew better having raised Dore to prominence and now saw in the request by the Itsekiri establishment an attempt to take further advantage of the situation.
Erejuwa II succeeded Ginuwa II on 24th March, 1951. Erejuwa II remained in Ode-Itsekiri for two and half months before he made or was made to take the tactical decision to relocate the seat of the monarchy from Ode-Itsekiri to Warri City which has now become ‘Itsekiri territory’ by virtue of the Privy Council decision. Even then the new Olu had no Palace in Warri to settle into and he was ironically accommodated in the private house of an Effurun (Urhobo) man who was maternally Itsekiri. By relocating to Warri, the new Olu was making a move as important as when Ginuwa I left Benin in 1480. Now, 400 years after founding Ode-Itsekiri he had moved away to another land, the land of Dore Numa.
The installation of Erejuwa II coincided with the politicking of the pre-independence era and the Action Group Party had just been formed by Chief Obafemi Awolowo. This party was busy soliciting adherents in order to upstage the N.C.N.C. in the politics of the Western Region and they found willing allies in prominent Itsekiris of that time who the party in turn bestow patronages on. As Sagay says:

"Soon after the coronatin of Olu Erejuwa II, campaigns for elections under the Macpherson Constitution began. A new Political Party had evolved from the Yoruba cultural group, Egbe Omo Oduduwa. This party led by Chief Obafemi Awolowo was called the Action Group. As Okotie-Eboh became a prominent member of the N.C.N.C. so also an Itsekiri lawyer Mr. And later Chief Arthur Prest, Mr. Ogbemi N. Rewane, Mr. Alfred Rewane, Mr. Reece Adukugho and Mr. Ekwejune-Etchie became prominent members of Action Group…."

"The Itsekiri people thrived under the Action Group administration in Western Nigeria, enjoying party patronages."

One of such patronages, perhaps by far the most controversial greatest single one, was the changing of the title of Olu of Itsekiri to Olu of Warri in May 1952, which the British had earlier refused. The Action Group Party also by its Western Region Legal Notice No. 96 of 1959 established the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust. Even before their 99 year terms had expired the Western Region Government returned most of the lands taken from the Agbarha-Urhobo by the Dore leases to the Trust. The provisos in the law establishing the Trust and intended to limit its power to only lands that were communally owned by Itsekiri, were ignored by the Trust and the Western Region Government did not bother them. It was claimed that all lands in Warri Division (the three Warri Local Government Areas) were Itsekiri lands and the Trust acted accordingly. It practically invaded Warri City lands where it granted leases indiscriminately without the consent of the indigenous Agbarha-Urhobo whose lands were affected or returning 2/3 of the revenue to those who were in possession as prescribe by law. Also, individuals, including Itsekiris, who had taken leases from the Agbarha people prior to the inception of the Trust were required to take out fresh leases from the Trust. Only a handful who could resist while the majority complied to save themselves from harassment. Even Messrs John Holt Transport Limited were in 1959 compelled to execute a Deed of lease despite that entered into between Ogbe and john Holt & Co (of Liverpool) Ltd. In 1911 for the same land. 

It was the irony of events that Chief Arthur Prest one of the prominent Itsekiri in the Action Group under whose aeges the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust was created and who is also credited with bringing about the conversion from Olu of Itsekiri to Olu of Warri fell victim of its fury when his private family possession was encroached upon by the Trust. He successfully challenged the action in court. On 9th July, 1971, the court found in favour of Chief Arthur Prest against the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust in Suit No. W/15/1970. The Judge declared:

"For the avoidance of doubt, especially as there are numerous cases pending in the Warri High Court on this overlordship issue, I hereby make it abundantly clear that the defendants have no power whatsoever in law to exercise the Olu of Warri rights of overlordship over lands owned by private individuals and families in Warri Division.
From all that I have already said, I hereby declare that in accordance with Itsekiri customary law the piece or parcel of land situate at Warri, the exact area of which is shown in the survey plan attached to the deed of lease granted by Chief Ogbe (wronglfully spelt Oagbe herein) of Warri to Messrs. John Holt of Liverpool Limited, which said lease is registered as No. 9/1911 and engrossed on pages 143 to 148 Register of Native Lands Volume 1 of the Land Registry at Warri, now kept in the Land Registry in the Office at Benin-City, is the family land of the Ogbe family of Ugbuwangue Warri.

"I hereby adjudge that the deed of lease granted by the defendants to Messrs. Holts Transport Limited, in Warri dated 8th November, 1961, which has now been taken over by the Nigerian Ports Authority from the Holts Transport Limited as lessees, and which said lease is registered as No. 36 at page 6 in Volume 398 of the Lands Registry, Benin-City is Null and Void and of no effect whatsoever. I hereby order it to be cancelled and it is hereby cancelled.

"I hereby make an order of perpetual injunction to restrain the defendants from continuing to collect rents of any type whatsoever accruing from the land in dispute."

This judgment was upheld on appeal. This was the beginning of the end for the Trust as it also lost to the Ugborodo/Ogidigben people as already highlighted above. But by far the most catastrophic and significant loss for the Trust was in Idundun v Okumagba more popularly known as the Okumagba land case where the Trust through the Ogitsi Itsekiri family of Okere attempted to divest the Okere-Urhobo people (whose lands constitute 1/3 of Warri land mass) of their title to their lands on the basis of the overlordship of the Olu Itsekiri. In a considered judgment, the learned trial judge (Ekeruche J.) after painstakingly reviewing, at great length all the evidence adduced by both parties, rejected the traditional evidence adduced in support of the Itsekiri claim after observing as follows:-

"Considering first the traditional evidence in the case, my view of that aspect of the evidence in plaintiffs' 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.

The plaintiffs say that Ginuwa I founded a kingdom and that before Ekpen 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 part of the kingdom founded by Ginuwa I before Ekpen came there…
The evidence in plaintiffs' 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 no evidence in plaintiffs' 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.

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."

As to the veracity of the genealogical evidence, the learned trial judge observed as follows:-

"The evidence in plaintiffs' case is that Ginuwa I founded his kingdom about 1485 and evidence in the case established that he got to Ijalla.
The evidence in the plaintiffs' case is that the first of the ancestors of the Idimisobos (Okere-Urhobo), that is, the defendants' people, to come to Okere came there during the reign of Olaraja Arukuleyi and the plaintiffs put the time of Arukuleyi's reign at about two hundred years ago or more. The Olu then was Akengbuwa who was on the throne from 1795 to 1848 (see the evidence of plaintiffs' 6th witness, Chief Begho).

From 1485 when Ginuwa I founded his kingdom to 1795 when Akengbuwa became Olu and during whose reign plaintiffs say Arukuleyi was Olaraja is about three hundred years, actually three hundred and ten years to be precise.

The only Olaraja mentioned by the plaintiffs before that interval was Ogitsi and Gbegbenu.  All that plaintiffs were able to say of Olaraja Gbegbemu's genealogy is that he is descended from Ogitsi....

The view I take of this aspect of the evidence in plaintiffs' case is that they are not certain about the precise genealogical connections of the said persons and that this is so is even confirmed by the evidence of 1st plaintiff when he said 'Gbegbenu is a descendant of Ogitsi*  I do not remember the father of Gbegbenu.'"

After considering the following books to which he was referred in the course of his address by learned counsel for the plaintiffs -

(1)  "The Benin Kingdom and Edo-speaking peoples of Southern Nigeria" by R. E. Bradbury and P. C. Lloyd; and
(2)  "A Short History of Benin" by Jacob Egharevba,

as to how Ginuwa I left Benin, the learned trial judge observed as follows:-

"Save as to the date of departure of Ginuwa from Benin City and his settling finally at Ijalla and founding a kingdom, none of the books affords any reliable basis for testing the veracity of the rest of plaintiffs' traditional evidence."

The learned trial judge also considered a third book cited before him - P. A. Talbot's book on "The Peoples of Southern Nigeria" - and observed that that book only shows that Ginuwa left Benin about 1480 to found an Itsekiri Kingdom and that nothing therein referred to by learned counsel dealt with how Okere was founded.
As for plaintiffs' contention that the defen­dants' ancestors paid tribute to the plaintiffs' fa­mily, the learned trial judge made the following finding of fact:­ 

"As regards payment of tribute by defendants' ancestors and peoples, I do not believe that they paid any tribute to anyone in Okere....
The claim in Ex. 22 which was a suit commenced in the Ode-Itsekiri Clan Court for recovery of possession of land, plaintiffs therein claimed in respect of land known as Ogitsi Ekpen land situated in Okere Town now in possession of the defendants as a tenant of the plaintiffs' family and also £75 mesne profit. (Underline is mine).

The suit was instituted by (1) Chief Omatsone, (2) Tsegbeyeri Awani and (3) Pegbeti Popo (for and on be­half of the Ekpen Ogitsi family of Okere) against Okumagba of Idimisobo.

In the first place there is nothing to show that the land to which the claim related was not land in the Itsekiri area of Okere but land in the Idimisobo area of Okere. As I have found in this case, the two blocs are separate, evidence in the whole case showing that since the Idimisobos have been in Okere, and the plaintiffs say it is over three hundred years now, they have maintained their identity.

But the interesting point about the case - vide Ex. 22 - is that the Court of first instance found against the plaintiffs there.

The judgment of the Magistrate's Court that heard the appeal in Ex. 22 shows that it appeared the suit was based upon an action brought as far back as 1927 in the then Warri Native Court (Suit No. 788/27) between Nikoro of Okere and Okumagba of Okere. It is said that in that case an order was made that the defendant who is the same as the defendant/respondent in the appeal before the Magistrates’ Court was to pay to the Ogitsi family who were represented by one Nikoro to whom the plaintiffs/appellants in the appeal in the Magistrate's Court were succes­sors, the sum of £5 as rent and that the land was that of the plaintiffs named therein.

The judgment shows that an appeal was lodged to the Warri Native Court of Appeal and there the Presi­dent stated that 'The Jekri and Sobos have been living together without ques­tion of paying rents to the other and cannot do so now.'

That passage in the said Appeal Court's judgement is important parti­cularly as it was made in a suit ins­tituted in 1927, and especially when one takes into consideration the evi­dence in plaintiffs' case which evi­dence, I, of course, do not believe, that it was in the time of Olaraja Uku who died in 1905 that the Idimisobos ceased to pay tribute.

That the ldimisobos paid any tribute at any time to the Olu or the Ogitsi families runs counter to the sweeping statement that the Jekris and Sobos have been living together without question of one paying rents to the other and cannot do so now. That statement, in my view, supports the evidence in defendants' case that the ldimisobos never paid tribute to anyone. Exhibit 22 was tendered by the plaintiffs."

After all these observations, the learned trial judge thereupon dismissed the plaintiffs' claim in its entirety after finding finally as follows: ­

"As between the evidence in plaintiffs' case and that in the defendants' case, I accept and believe the evidence in the defendants' case as truthfully stating how Ogitsi family and the defendants' people came to be in Okere area.

I accept and believe the evidence of the defendants that three persons, namely, Idama, Ohwotemu and Sowhoruvwe, first came to Okere and founded various tracts of land as they said, and that all others of the Idimisobo who came to Okere came after the aforementioned three persons had come.

I also accept the evidence of the defendants as to how and when Ogitsi got to the waterside area of Okere and made his settlement there, and as to how the settlement and that of defendants' people grew until they met in Okere.
As I earlier stated, I am satis­fied that the defendants' people are not Ghaminidos in Okere and never paid tribute or rent to anyone in Okere. I am satisfied they were never tenants to anyone. I accept and believe the evi­dence of defendants that the members of Ighegbodu family who went to Odion did so freely....

I am satisfied and find as a fact that the land in dispute in this case including the area where rubber plan­tations are shown on plaintiffs' plan, Exhibit 2, and also where Madam Esale's rubber plantation is, belong to the defendants and that they have been such owners and in possession of the land from the time their ancestors founded the land.

The plaintiffs have failed to prove that Ogitsi family owns the land in dispute, or that Itsekiris of Okere own the land in dispute."

The Itsekiri appealed the decision up to the Supreme Court and lost all the way despite being represented by legal luminaries and important personalities like Chief F. R. A. Williams, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Dr. F. A. Ajayi etc. The Supreme Court ruled for the Okumagba family when it held:

"A point which the plaintiffs and their counsel have tried to urge on this court that because the land in dispute is in Warri and so in in Warri Division, the Olu of Warri has right of over-lordship over it because as Olu of Warri, he has rights of over-lordship over all lands in Warri Division. The whole argument is erroneous. The Olu by title is Olu of Warri, but his rights of over-lordship relate only lands of Itsekiri people and even then, there is ground for saying that it does not relate to all lands of all Itsekiri."

The decision seemed to concur with an earlier declaration by the British Colonial Administration when it approved on September 1, 1952, the Western Nigeria Government's recommendation to change the Olu's title from Olu of Itsekiri to Olu of Warri to wit: “His Honour approves the change in the Olu's title from that of Olu of Itsekiri to that of Olu of Warri. It should be made quite clear, however, that, the change in title does not on any account imply an extension of the Olu's traditional authority."
The Supreme Court finally held thus:

“On the whole, it is sufficient to say that most of the matters canvassed before us were exa­mined meticulously and rejected by the learned trial judge for reasons upon which we cannot improve and to which we do not desire to add except, perhaps, to say that whether taken separately or together, none of the points urged upon us by learned counsel for the appellants would, in our view, justify any interference with the findings and decision of the learned trial judge. Consequently, we are of the view that the appeal has no merit and it is accor­dingly dismissed…”

It can be said that the Okere-Urhobo were fortunate because had this suit come up earlier during the colonial era they would have lost. The Agbarha-Urhobo who were dogged and determined in the pursuit of what they felt was rightly theirs during the colonial era lost all the way to the Privy Council on exact same facts; this is even more so in the face of Dore Numa’s damning admission in his letter to the Counsel to the Agbarha people. The Ijaws on the other hand did not fare any better. To quote Edwin Clarke:

“In Justice Atake’s wild and false claims that the Itsekiri have won all land cases in Warri Division and have no more to win, he cited Suit No. W/148/56 in which he claims that the Ijaws who were the plaintiffs in the suit has no defence hence they decided to file motion to discontinue the case having seen the formidable statement of defence of the Itsekiris. This reckless assertion of Justice Atake is false and misleading. It is necessary therefore to state the correct facts of the motion to discontinue the action brought by the Ogbe Ijoh people as plaintiffs.

Strangely, on the day of hearing the Olu, Erejuwa II, who was the defendant in Suit No. W/148/56 and plaintiff in Suit N. w/63/58 did not appear in court, and according to the Judge no one could account for his absence. The second surprise was that the Itsekiri then applied to the court for leave to strike out Suit No.W/63/58 instituted by the Olu of Warri against the Ogbe Ijoh as counter claim. The application was opposed by the Ogbe Ijoh people through their lawyer. The application by the Itsekiri was made on 13/4/64. On 29/6/64 Justice H.W. Rhodes Vivour ruled in their favour.

At this point, the late Honourable Festus Okotie-Eboh, a prominent Itsekiri figure, in his exalted position as Federal Minister of Finance, made an intervention by inviting the Ogbe Ijoh people to attend a meeting with other Ijaw leaders, including the late Senator J.M. Egbuson, Chief N.K. Porbeni, Chief B.K. Erebi and Chief N. Ezonbodoh, during which he appealed to the Ogbe Ijoh people to withdraw their action from court in the interest of unity and good relationship between the Ijaws and the Itsekiris, for, it was only when the Ijaws and the Itsekiris work together in the newly created Midwestern Region, that they would be able to achieve some benefits for themselves. A committee was then set up to draw up the terms of withdrawal. Thereafter, the motion for discontinuance was filed by the Ogbe Ijoh people.

To the shock of the Ogbe Ijoh, their motion was opposed by the defendants in a typical act of perfidy on the ground that the case had been fixed for hearing in June 1964. The date for hearing was duly fixed, although the application for withdrawal or striking out of suit No. W/63/59 by the Olu had been granted by the same judge in the same court.

Mr. Godwin Boyo for the defendants asked the court to dismiss plaintiffs’ claim with costs in the absence of genuine reasons for the discontinuance and argued that there was no similarity under which Suit No. W/63/58 brought by the Itsekiris was discontinued and the circumstances under which the plaintiff, the Ijaws in suit No. W/148/56, sought to discontinue their suit.

The judge obliged him and dismissed the claim with a condition that the plaintiffs, that is, the Ogbe Ijoh people, were "precluded" from bringing further action against any or either of the 1st and 2nd defendants in respect of their claims of which specific particulars were given in the writ of summons, statement of claims and amended statement of claim in this action. Leave was accordingly granted the plaintiffs to discontinue the action.

The Ogbe Ijoh people and the entire Warri community of Ijoh and Urhobo were aggrieved by the oppressive ruling because no one could understand why the Itsekiris, who brought Suit No. W/63/58 against Ogbe Ijoh without giving any reason and particularly when the plaintiff (the Olu) in that suit did not appear in court and no one could account for his absence. Clearly, it was ridiculous, unjust, oppressive and inconsistent for the same Justice Rhodes Vivour in the same court to impose unprecedented and unwarranted conditions on the Ogbe Ijoh people when they similarly applied for the discontinuance of their action against the Itsekiri people, giving reasons for the discontinuance.

It must be noted that there were no legal arguments on the merit of the case before both sides made applications to the court for withdrawal. However, the issues that went on appeal to the Supreme Court were procedural and were mainly on points of law, and not facts. While the court precluded Ogbe Ijoh people from instituting another action against the Itsekiris, it was the fear of losing woefully to the Ogbe Ijoh in many subsequent litigations that scared and precluded the Itsekiri from instituting another action against the Ogbe Ijoh people since the discontinuance of their claim in Suit No. W/63/58.

At this point, it must be made abundantly clear that the two cases which were set for hearing on 29th June, 1964 were never heard. Both parties, namely, the Itsekiri and the Ogbe Ijoh, decided to discontinue their claims in Suits No. W/148/56 and W/63/58. The case therefore remains open as to who owns Warri."

The final nail on the coffin of the issue of ‘overlordship’ came with the passage in 1978 of the Land Use Decree entrenched in Section 274(d) of the 1979 Constitution of the Federal Government of Nigeria which effectively abolished the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust. The various functions of the Trust, including the collection of revenue were turned over to the Bendel State Ministry of Lands. With the passage of the Land Use Decree, it became possible for the court to declare in Dzungwe v Gbishe & Anor (1985) 2 NWLR that "a right of occupancy represented the nearest equivalent to rights of ownership as obtainable in the Southern part of Nigeria". The decree in effect, killed the notion of overlordship as it related to land with the exception of communal land which is vested with the state government.

(II)     DISENFRANCHISEMENT OF NON-ITSEKIRI PEOPLES OF WARRI
The series of party patronages from the Action Group to the Unity Party of Nigeria coupled with the efforts of Chief Okotie-Eboh of the N.C.N.C. gave the Itsekiri the opportunity to solidify their position in Warri. The obvious drive was to make good on the claim that Warri is the exclusive homeland of the Itsekiri by seeking government policies aimed at disenfranchising the non-Itsekiri people of Warri. The fear of marginalization of minority groups in Nigeria was considered serious enough to be placed on the agenda of Constitutional Conference held in London in 1957 and 1958. One of the most noticeable outcomes of the conference was the setting up of the Willink Commission to examine the fears of minority groups in any part of Nigeria and to propose ways to allay such fears. The Commission did not recommend the establishment of separate states for the minorities as many had expected as a way of allaying the fears of minorities. Instead, it called for the establishment of a minority area and other special areas which it believed will encourage social and economic progress among minority groups. The Itsekiri, through its sons and friends in government, pressed its case with the commission and were specifically mentioned in its report to wit: .... In the town of Warri where they [Itsekiri] number less than a sixth of the population, they consider it an injustice that other tribes should have a vote or any say in the affairs of the town.

The fears of the Ijaw and the Urhobo, the other indigenous ethnic groups in Warri, may have been discussed in the overall context of minority rights in Nigeria, but unlike the Itsekiri, they were not specifically cited in the Commission Report. So in 1958, when the Communal lands Vesting in Trustees Law was passed by the Western Nigeria Government, the Itsekiri readily used the opportunity, to secure control of all lands in Warri. In 1959, the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust (Warri Division) was formed to implement the law in Warri. Under the law, the government surrendered the leases of lands acquired by the British Colonial Administration in 1906, 1908 and 1911 (which belong to the Agbarha-Urhobo), to the Trust as the pristine landlord of all lands in Warri, including other lands belonging to the non Itsekiri people of Warri. Many individuals were required on the pain of confiscation to take fresh leases on lands they already owned. The new round of efforts to control land, ignored the feelings of all indigenous people of Warri, who as Rodolfo Stavenhagen inferred, know that "land is not only an economic factor of production, it is the basis of cultural and social identity; the home of ancestors, the site of religious and mythical links to the past and to the supernatural".

The effects of the 'land-grab' were to be observed in gerrymandering - the division of an area into election districts so as to give one group an advantage over others, and other unfair methods of distributing political power. Under the influence of Festus Okotie-Eboh, it was enshrined in the Midwest Constitution of 1963 that only the Itsekiri were eligible to run for political offices in the Division. All other people of Warri could vote but cannot be voted for. This constitutional provision means that Urhobos like Dr. F. O. Esiri who was elected Chairman of the Warri Urban District Council, 1954 - 1958 and Chief Daniel Okumagba, a former elected member of the Western House of Assembly from Warri, 1955, could no longer aspire to any elected political office in Warri. Beginning in 1976, a number of autonomous Ijaw local government councils in Warri Division have also been gerrymandered into districts that favor the Itsekiri.

The legal instrument, WRLN 176 0f 1955 which established the Warri Divisional Council stipulated that the divisional council was made up of three autonomous Itsekiri councils viz Benin River Local Council, Koko Local Council, and Ugborodo Local Council with headquarters at Gbokoda, Koko, and Ugborodo respectively; three Ijaw autonomous councils namely Gbaramatu Local Council, Ogbe-Ijoh Local Council and Egbedema Local Council with headquarters at Oporoza, Ogbe-Ijoh and Opuema respectively. The seventh, Warri Urban District Council was reserved for the Ijaw, Itsekiri and Urhobo who are indigenous to the Warri urban area. The electoral arrangement for the Ijaw and the Itsekiri, thus complied with the Western Nigeria Government Chiefs Law of 1957 Cap 19, now applicable in Delta State, which states that "The Olu of Warri is the prescribed authority of Warri Division excluding Egbema, Gbaramatu and Ogbe-Ijoh Council Areas". The legal instrument of 1955, also delineated within the Warri Urban District Council area separate electoral wards for the three indigenous ethnic groups, including Wards C1, C2 and F1 (Government Area) for the people of Ogbe-Ijoh in Warri. All these wards have been systematically replaced by Itsekiri wards thus depriving the Ijaw of any representation in the Warri council. In addition, Itsekiri villages of Ode-Itsekiri, Orugbo, Obodo and Omadino have by electoral registration exercise of 1998 been included as wards in Warri metropolis, solely as many Ijaw and Urhobo believed, to give electoral advantage to the Itsekiri over other groups. The villages had been traditionally considered to be outside Warri metropolis.

The Itsekiri says their desires have historical antecedents reaching as far back as 1473 (that is, over 500 years) when their founding Bini prince took over political control of most of the Itsekiri settlements which he met within the Warri divisional area (Ayomike, 1990:48) It is on this ground that the Itsekiri see the Warri divisional area as co-terminus with Warri Kingdom (Vanguard 13/4/97, p.4). As Fred Agbeyegbe points out in his letter in 'The Guardian' of 25/4/97,

'All through my fifty-years-plus of existence, I, like any other Itsekiri was brought up to believe that the Ijaws and the Urhobos are customary tenants and the Itsekiris the owners of the land'.

Advertisements by concerned Itsekiris have reiterated this in words conveying feelings so deep rooted that they have transcended the realm of mere emotions and gone into the realm of faith:

'The idea of carving out a local government for the Ijaws from our homeland is not acceptable. We are not against local governments being created for them elsewhere but not from our homeland' (Vanguard 16/4/97, Warri Council of Chiefs).

The conceived special position of the Itsekiri in relation to neighbouring ethnic groups is what led Chief Mene-Afejuku to say in a Delta Television programme that any child born by an Itsekiri parent and a parent from another ethnic group was first and foremost, in despite of paternity, an Itsekiri and only secondarily someone from the other ethnic group. This assertion in essence means the Itsekiri are of a superior breed to their Ijaw and Urhobo neighbours. All effort is geared toward inculcating this notion into any Itsekiri child whether or not both parents are Itsekiri. This is the reason why you find more die-hard Itsekiris who are of mixed parentage like the Atakes, Okotie-Ebohs, Rewanes etc.

The Itsekiri, it is therefore evident, are an ancient and proud monarchical ethnic group whose sensibilities are perfectly in harmony with feudatory relationships with neighbouring people of other ethnic groups. The Itsekiri position, or, more accurately, situation, notwithstanding, the Ijaw/Urhobo ethnic groups have equally strong feelings for freedom and self-determination. Again, their position is predicated on historical and cultural antecedents reaching as far back as 1473 (that is, over 500 years) when Agbarha and Okere Urhobo founding fathers settled within the Warri Divisional Area. There are historical and cultural grounds to believe that the Ijaw and Urhobo, whose traditional mode of political control was clan based (a clan being a family of blood-knitted and dialectally similar villages, usually under the benign control of a Pere or Ovie) have always resented their subordination (see the several litigations listed above, evidence that the Olu's overlordship has been perennially disputed, even in the Itsekiri-influenced colonial courts).

It is on this ground that the Ijaw wrote to the Head of State in 'The Guardian of 25/4/97, asking in effect for liberation: 'We have suffered untold hardship, oppression, denial of fundamental human rights, non-representation at Federal, State and Local Government levels and the continued blocking of our legitimate demand for self-determination. As a result of these we have resolved not to be in the same LGA with the Itsekiri. Advertisements by concerned Ijaws and Urhobos have reiterated this in words conveying feelings so deep-rooted that they have also transcended the realm of mere emotions and gone into the realm of faith: 'Every human being has a homeland and their Olu and his Itsekiri homeland is Ode-Itsekiri and their respective villages, not in Warri metropolis and other people's villages where the Olu and his Itsekiri leaders are complete strangers' ('The Guardian', 30/4/97, statement by Otota of Okere-Urhobo clan).

The Warri Council of [Itsekiri] Chiefs is currently sponsoring a bill to the Nigerian Senate to create The Federal Protected Territory for Warri Division, without consultation with other indigenous people of the area. The administrative structure will be dominated by the Itsekiri, who are considered the minority group in the area. The bill also calls for the creation of a Territorial Force Command under the control of the Itsekiri to maintain law and order. Many fear that such a command will be used to intimidate any group, most likely the Ijaw , Urhobo and any other group who might be opposed to such a system (Vanguard, July 5, 1999, pp. 22 -23). In effect, this suppose bill seek to legitimize apartheid in the Warri area.

The conceived rights of the Ijaw and Urhobo in Warri to self-rule and liberty from foreign domination is what led D.A. Obiomah to say recently that, ‘The over-lordship institution is a jingo, a bully, a predator studiously calling its Urhobo victims oppressors’ ('The Guardian', 24/4/97. Article titled 'Abolish over-lordship of Olu of Warri') The Ijaw and Urhobo, it is therefore evident, are ancient and rather republican ethnic groups whose sensibilities are perfectly adverse to feudatory relationships with a neighbor with feudal overlordship tendency.

We would concede, therefore, that in its rudimentary form, the Warri problem is that of a struggle between hegemony and autonomy, between the desire to rule or locally govern others and the desire of these others to be free from that rule or local government. These basic feelings would rationally be disguised through sophistry, through gunboat diplomatic postures and through outright falsehood, but it is the duty of justice to see through the smoke screens and to do what is right in the circumstance.

(V) CONCLUSION

The history of Warri is that of a small cluster of villages, where three indigenous groups, Ijaw, Itsekiri and Urhobo, when left alone, were able to live in relative peace, in spite of differences in language, customs and traditions. The British intervention, early in 1900s, designed to advance British interest in the region, destroyed this harmony. The disruption of peace began with the establishment of a consulate close to the center of growing commercial activity on mainland immediately north of Warri River which is present day Warri metropolis. The acquisition by colonialists, of land needed for development of the new township was handled unjustly not only to deny communities compensation due them but also create privileges for the Itsekiri establishment as represented for long by Dore Numa. The Itsekiri establishment profited from the British presence largely through the emergence of Dore Numa as a lackey that helped to perpetuate British interests in the area.

With the end of British rule in Nigeria, the economically and culturally privileged Itsekiri minority now finds its privileges and interests questioned by the Ijaw and Urhobo, the other ethnic groups in the area. The Itsekiri reaction to the challenge is to organize to maintain privileges by relying once more, on the instruments of the government in power, to safeguard those interests. The Ijaw and the Urhobo majority, nonetheless, continue to demand jurisdictional rights for the collective good and interests of all peoples in Warri. One would have expected that when communities are in conflict, the State as a neutral body, to step in to restore order, arbitrate between the groups, or to correct torts that may have been inflicted on any of the communities by the other.

What is happening in Warri showed that the State whether it was Action Group Government of Western Nigeria or subsequent Governments, became, for one reason or the other, a party to the conflict by aligning itself with the Itsekiri establishment to the detriment of other groups in the city. The government had at various times, imposed solutions that only served to provoke further misunderstanding, rivalries, tensions, friction, conflicts and sometimes violence between the ethnic groups in the area i.e the relocation of the Headquarters of the Warri South West Local Government Area from Ogbe-Ijoh to Ogidigben and the subsequent reversal of that decision after intra-ethnic clashes claiming hundreds of lives. The non-Itsekiri indigenous elements of Warri do not appear to be willing or prepared to abide by measures which they regard as efforts to enforce domination through local colonization in ways that are reminiscent of British Colonial imperialism.

The intensity of the conflict, on the surface, is hard to explain to writers like Lloyd and others in the western world who consider ethnic riots as urban issues that involve working class people. Lloyd in his attempt to explain the ethnic politics in Warri posed the question: What had the Itsekiri common man to gain from these struggles? The conflict does not appear to have much to do with economic competition between the groups. Warri has not been known for any labor unrest that arose from factory closings or evidence of businesses that are specifically limited to any one group. As Lloyd inferred the presence of the Urhobo has been exaggerated to create a climate of unnecessary hostility. Neither is there any immediate likelihood that the Itsekiri will lose their identity because of emergence of Ijaw and Urhobo as political forces to reckon with in Warri. Nevertheless, Llyod may have sensed the real reason for the ethnic problem, when he remarked that: "….. one ought to look closely to see which individuals gain from exploiting this tension and study the means by which they seek to gain their ends". Lloyd's accounts confirm what many in the Niger Delta had known for a long time that the common Itsekiri man, is susceptible to manipulation by his rulers. The Itsekiri establishment had exploited the cultural affinity its ethnic followers show for the Olu and had used the followers to defend narrow interests that are not theirs. In normal times, the ordinary Itsekiri person relies on mutual economic ties with his or her immediate neighbors, the Bini, Ijaw, Isoko and Urhobo to make a living. The Itsekiri that live in Sapele, an Urhobo town are more than those in Warri, many Itsekiri are known to flock during times of ethnic riots in Warri to Sapele and other Urhobo towns and villages for safety. Thus Itsekiri fears of domination by Urhobo seem to be unrealistic and appear to be expressed out of proportion to the actual danger facing the Itsekiri.

Warri like many other Nigerian cities has become highly heterogeneous and polyglot. The reality of urbanization, means that the Ijaw, Itsekiri, Urhobo, and in fact, all groups of people in Warri, regardless of race, ethnicity or religious background, must learn to live together in peace and harmony, sharing common goals and working for a common destiny. The medieval doctrine of feudal 'over-lordship of Warri', imposed by the British, has long been deposed in Nigerian courts. Besides the lack of legal basis, using the notion of over-lordship to establish privileges for some while denying the same to other indigenes of the same area, is archaic and has no place in a modern society. Many members of the three ethnic groups, in spite of cultural differences and obstacles created by their leaders, much to their credit, continue to intermingle through marriages and business interactions, making the need for peaceful coexistence all the more imperative. The indigenous communities can improve on this trend by coming together through credible leaders to fashion a course of action to halt the theft of oil wealth and to wrest the control of the resources of the area from the federal government. The proceeds from the rich oil resources are enough to develop the area in ways that will guarantee employment, and improve the standard of living for all the peoples of Warri, and bring much needed stability to the area. In essence, Warri can be used as an experiment to determine what the society of the future will look like, a differentiated political community where individual rights are respected and protected. The success of the experiment, will have ramifications that go beyond the boundaries of Warri; it would have great implications for civilization and all mankind.

REFERENCES

1.   William Moore – History of Itsekiri
2.   Professor Obaro Ikime, Merchant Prince of the Niger Delta
3.   Obaro Ikime: Chief Dogho: The Lugardian System in Warri, 1917-1932. J.H.S.N. Vol. 3, No. 2 Dec. 1965.
4.   Obiomah, Daniel, A. - Warri: Land, Overlords & Land Rights (Ometan Vs Dore Numa) Fact, Fiction & Imperialism. Warri, Nigeria: GKS Press.
5.   Obiomah, Daniel, A. 1995. Warri, Urhobo & The Nigerian Nation. Warri, Nigeria: GKS
Press.
6.   Sagay, John, O. E. 1980. The Warri Kingdom. Sapele, Nigeria: Progress Publishers.
7.   Lloyd, Peter. 1963. The Itsekiri in the Nineteenth Century: An Outline of Social History."
Journal of African History, IV, 2, 207 – 231.
8.   Urhobo Historical Society, 2000. British Imperialism in Urhoboland: British Colonial
'Treaties of Protection' With Urhobo Communities in "Warri District"1892 – 93.
9.   Edwin Clark - Warri crisis: Why we must embrace as brothers.

Facts behind the Warri crisis (Part 2)

(V) THE EMERGENCE OF DORE NUMA?

It was William Moore who in his book “History of Itsekiri” called Dore “the worst usurper in Itsekiri history; like Prince Otselopun Dore deserved to be hanged”. Of him Moore also says, “the slogan against him is, “fie upon thee,” fie upon thee!” Saying “he was instrumental in the success achieved by the British government in Brohimi War of 1894” with Nana.  He also subverted the Bini people. Dore was the kind of man who today would be tried for treason. Dore did not live in Warri but came in from his own village called Odogene which he founded and lived in, coming to Warri by canoe. At page 194 of History of Itsekiri, William Moore says:

“. . . .Chief Dore Numa self-established himself as Head of Itsekiri people whereas he was never so made by the Itsekiri people, because they only regarded him as a chief created by the government in like manner as other Chiefs.”

Also at page 169 of the same book Moore records that

“. . . . he falsely presented himself by word and implication as the Olu Itsekiri by reason of his government given name of Paramount Chief. Thus he used to haul over his canoe on special occasions a flag with the inscription, “Paramount Chief Dore Numa, the Olu of Itsekiris, Sobos and Ijaws; and it was with this glossy pretension that he deceived and intimidated the old men who passed on before us, that whoever opposed him would be punished by the government and be made to suffer late Nana Olomu’s fate.”

Dore appointed or recommended the appointment of Warrant Chiefs in the old Warri Division as the ‘pacification’ progressed, and also Native Court members all of whom were under him either as President of the Native Appeal Court or as native Authority, Warri. Professor Obaro Ikime, says in his Merchant Prince of the Niger Delta, page 193: 

“. . . . in the twenties various court actions were taken out against Dogho (Dore) by these descendants (of Olu Akengbuwa) Dogho did not lose a single one of the suits taken out against him by the Itsekiri and the Urhobo. The courts upheld the prerogatives conferred by the British on their protégé. Even when the issue of the subsidies came before the Resident, and ultimately to the Governor, these officers did not see fit to put right what was clearly an irregularity. Dogho was allowed to go on receiving the subsidies due to other men on the ground that he had been doing so for many years. In 1894 Administrative Officers seemed to have listened avidly to Nana’s misuse of his power and position. In the 1920's and 1930's the British Administration shut their eyes to the glaring instances of abuse of power by Dogho. Well they might. Nana was an African Nationalist who refused to yield to British imperialist ambitions and so had to be broken. Dogho was a British lackey whose position and authority had to be upheld at all cost. Hence, despite mounting attacks against Dogho the British failed to review his position till he was removed by death in 1932.”

Ikime also gives in a picturesque manner the halo of prestige accorded Chief Dore by the British Officials as seen by a visitor Blndloss; Ikime says.

"The testimony of one Binloss, a British traveller in the 1890's gives an even clearer picture of the esteem in which Dogho was held by the British administration. The Vice-Consul (Warri) was entertaining Bindloss and his fellow travelers to a dinner to which Dogho was invited."
Bindloss wrote:
"There sat down was a Niger man attired in plain white linen whose name is a power in the Delta and whose counsel has been taken by Government in times of anxiety. His fine white gig lay alongside the bank, flying the jack above her steer; and the writer was informed that when a newly arrived and zealous official ordered its owner to abandon the use of the flag sacred to imperial service, he received a hint to let Chief Dore alone."

Dore with his flag was essentially British. As an African by birth he was to his British masters in the nature of tally card, albeit organic, to itemise the varying components of imperial territory for effective British rival claim and control.
Dore pretended to be the Olu of Itsekiri in all his litigations against his opponents when he had no locus standi to act as such. He was therefore an impostor who used his position as the political agent of Britain to great personal advantage including influencing the outcome of various judgments. To prove that Dore had no locus standi, it is reproduced hereunder a petition written by one Princess Akengbuwa to Col. Moorehouse protesting against Dore Numa’s claim of the Olu’s title:

“Sir,

With reference to our interview with you on the subject of land case between the Olu Akengbuwa family and Dore Numa which you intend to settle...the settlement cannot be arrived at if we had to sign on a new arrangement with Dore, because our main contention, which is still pending, is to restrain him from anything bearing the title or superscription of Olu Itsekiri, of which Akengbuwa was the latest holder....”

Among the royal children who signed and dispatched the letter to the Governor of Southern Nigeria, then styled Lieutenant_Governor, were Chiefs Ogbobine; Omagbemi; Skinn; Jim Ukuejuno Etchie; Denedo Etuwewe; Gbenebitse; Ekeke Ekenusi; Edu Kperegbeyi; Omatsuli Egbegbe; E. Okorodudu; Otseju Cheke; W.I., Omatsola; and W.A. Moore. As opposition to Chief Dore mounted even among Itsekiris, Sagay says:

“The Government was in a serious dilemma. So much had Chief Dore been propped up by the Residents and the District Officers that they could not afford to let the Chief down. The easy way to wriggle out of the difficulty could have been to get the Itsekiri people to appoint an Olu.”

Even the Resident after all the enquiries made soon realized the difficulties when in his 1928 report he stated:

“The net result of the year’s inquiries would indicate that an Olu cannot be appointed in Dore’s lifetime because Dore’s position has been too long established for the revival of Oluship to be regarded in any other light than that of reverse to the Ologbotsere faction which for half a century dominated Itsekiri’s politics.”

At this material point in time, it will be appropriate to hear what Dore thought of himself vis-à-vis all the lands in the colonial Warri Division. A clear insight will be the case of Olue v Edede later turned Dore v Olue (a case involving Itsekiris) where the Ogidigben people challenged his authority to lease their land to the colonial government without their consent. An excerpt from that case is instructive:

8th November 1921.
Paul for Plaintiff.
Bucknor for Defence.

“Plea:        Chief Dore is not the Olu or King of Warri. There is no Olu or King of Warri. No Olu or King has ever exercised authority over lands in Warri District. We plead exclusive ownership of the land as described on the plan.
Not entitled to any injunction. We are entitled to the full enjoyment of the land in question. Chief Dore is not entitled to be Olu. If he was appointed it was not according to Native Law and Custom…” 

“Chief Dore:       Sworn: My name is Dore Numa. I am Plaintiff in this case. I am head of Olu Family. I know the history of Olu … After Ekegua Idolu a woman succeeded … After Idolu, Shanoma and then Numa my father and I succeeded him … All these Olus have controlled the land described in the plan A and includes Ogidigbe. I remember a meeting held to find out who was to be the Olu. It was a big meeting of all the Olu Family and I was appointed Olu. This was about 16 to 20 years ago … The land described in the plan is only a small portion of Olu’s land. This action was brought by Chief Skin in my name … I was asked to sign this document on behalf of the Olu people. I got annoyed and took out this action. Marked “B” for identification. "B"” refers to an action in the Provincial Court. Skin went with the Resident to Ogidigben and reported something to me. I then brought an action in the Provincial Court. Skin first took an action at Forcados … Today when Europeans come, I the Olu give the land and we make a lease. I heard defendant’s pleas. I never heard before that I was not Olu …”

10/11/21 CROSS-EXAMINATION BY BUCKNOR:
When we came here we had fishing rights in all creeks and waters. When the Benin King sent his son to Warri District he told him to control all Jekri land.
We called ourselves Jekri. It was after we came we exercised control over what we called Jekri land … Sobos came from their country and we gave them permission. I don’t know when. The defendant’s ancestors came from Benin. When they came we intermarried and we call their issues Jekris … Jekri was the name given to those who accompanied their King’s son. The first batch which came from Benin became the owners of the land. I know Irigbo compound in Big Warri (Ode Itsekiri). They are Jekris. They came after the first batch. My father was Olu but not crowned … The Olu alone is entitled to give lands to strangers. Olu can take all the rents. I know of no case in which a stranger has paid rent and the Olu has not shared it. Koko and Sapele are included in Olu’s land. I get all the rents from there. Of European factories Olu is the lessor … Chief Egbe died a few years ago. He leased lands to Warri Stores. He had my permission … He is the son of an Olu my permission was given verbally. Ogbe leased land to John Holts but I signed on top … Ogbe, Egbe and I signed the lease to A. T. C. I gave Eric and Co permission to lease land at Fukama. Johnson has no right to lease land to the Delta Pastorate. Nana was never Olu. Many Olus have not lived in the King’s Palace. . . . I admit case marked “"D". I gave the judgment. It is only now they bring their Olu’s right over creeks and rivers. Judgment N. C. 76/18 admitted marked “E". Judgment N. C. 20/12 F. I told the Ogidigben they could give out land and take rents.”

CROSS-EXAMINATION CONTINUED:
The King of Benin told the first Olu he gave him the land which starts from Benin River to the water and includes all Warri Province … We gave Sapele land to Government on behalf of Olu. I signed the deed … I distribute the rents from Sapele among the Olu people there. The Sobos are more in number at Sapele than the Olus. The Sobos did not occupy the particular portion I gave to Government. The land which Sobos occupy is their land and I would (not) give their land to strangers. Sobos receive share of the rents sometimes as a dash from Olu. The dash is always the same. There has never been any protest from Koko and Warri about. I told the Government I was head of the Olu family verbally. Sir Ralph Moore I told. No one had ever questioned my rights to the rents of the land. Okere asked me if I gave portion of their land to Prison. I saw two chiefs Okere and then I gave the land … I told these chiefs because they are warranted Chiefs and the latter is of Olu Family. No one from Okere protested until now … The said Government wanted to take all their lands. They asked me if I gave the land. I told them I told the Government I had nothing to do with Okere town. I signed a paper for the land. I received £20.”

From the excerpt above, it is obvious that Dore considered himself Olu by tracing a false line of succession which he was not. It is also pertinent to state that this suit was instigated by the British Resident because of the strategic nature of Ogidigben to British trade and the need to keep same from the clutches of rival European powers. The case Dore v Olue arose after failure to brow-beat the Ogidigben people to sign an undertaking that all lands belonged to the Olu (as symbolized by Dore, their agent).

Dore had earlier given judgment in the Native Court over which he preside that Ogidigben people could lease lands and receive rents. He was now forced to adopt a different approach (as he will also do in other cases as will be shown subsequently) in order to do his master’s bidding. As to Okere, Sapele and Warri City Dore’s method is to lease to Government vacant lands required by the Government, while avoiding as a much as possible built up areas. On the other hand while Dore claimed that he alone could give out land to strangers there was evidence that other individuals could do the same meaning that the overlordship and ownership of all lands by the Olu was new and not customary. He wrapped up his evidence when he said, “I told the Ogidigben they could give out land and take rents." Even the evidence of Chief Skin, Dore’s right hand man, did not improve the morass of contradictions that Dore had built up in his evidence.

CHIEF SKIN        Sworn: I know the tradition and history of the Olu … I was present 20 years ago at the meeting at Big Warri. A native Doctor was sent for and Chief Dore was appointed and he has since acted. Before Dore Iye known as Dolu (female) was Olu. Then Shanoma and then Numa father of Dore.”

14/11/21 CHIEF SKIN under examination:
I brought this action on behalf of Chief Dore. I went with Dore to Forcados and saw defendant. He told the Resident and me that Ogidigben did not belong to Olu but to Olagua Ori. I never heard that before, or about Olagua Ori who was never an Olu … Chief Ogbemini is the eldest descendant from Shegua in the male line and was present when Dore was made Olu.

CROSS-EXAMINED:    
At this meeting the Olu family were present. We admit public on coronation days. Dore has not yet been crowned … There was no Olu just before Government came. I don’t know how long without Olu. I remember Chief Nana, He did not rule … The Ogidigbes said the land belonged to Ologu Ori that is why I said they did not belong to Olu.
(BUCKNOR says that Ogidigbes defendants, belong to Olu — under sovereign powers of Olu but claim to be the owners of land and Olu cannot interfere) I cannot give a single instance in which the Olu has exercised power over Ogidigbes.”

Adjourned
(Sgd) A. Webber
JUDGE
14/11/21

Apparently there was a difficulty in this case because if the Itsekiri themselves which Dore claims to be their Olu do not recognize him as such then the issue of his legitimacy will come to the fore. Somehow there had to be a way out so the presiding Judge, Webber J. called adjournment of the proceedings to save Dore from his predicament. When Dore returned he was armed with a consent judgment. In sum Chief Dore or the Resident had shifted ground from the Olu claiming title to all land to that of Olu holding land in trust while ensuring at the same time that only Chief Dore as central authority approved by the Resident and with his consent could grant leases to aliens. The Ogidigben people were forced to accede to the said consent judgment. This fact is borne out by the fact that the nagging issue of over-lordship reverberated again many decades later in 1970 in the celebrated case of Dick v Olue where the Ogidigben people successfully challenged the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust (a creation of the Western Region Government) on its entitlement to a share of compensation paid for land acquired by the Federal Government at Ugborodo/Ogidigben based on the Olu’s overlordship of all lands in Warri Division. The counsel to the Ugborodo/Ogidigben people, Godwin Boyo was cited by the presiding judge, Franklin Atake (now an Itsekiri frontline leader even though his father is Urhobo) for contempt based on counsel reminding court that it was acting contrary to an extant order of the Supreme Court that directed the sum of £27, 416:13s:4d be paid out to the Ugborodo/Ogidigben people whilst the balance of £13, 708:6s:8d remain in the High Court, Warri pending the determination of another appeal at the Supreme Court. Atake J. ignored the directive of the Supreme Court by ordering the payment of the balance to the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust in another case pending before him. The attempted trial of Godwin Boyo for contempt by Atake J. was overruled on appeal by the Supreme Court for procedural irregularity because the presiding judge took on the role of accuser, prosecutor and judge in his own cause.

Denedo, Moore and Omasachiche for and on behalf of themselves and the members of Olu Akengbuwa Family sued Dore Numa. The case held at Onitsha on May 2, 1923. The plaintiffs in the case deposed that they as the descendants of Olu Akengbuwa are the owners of parcel of land known as Ogbe Ijaw and Alder's Town Warri (lands belonging to Ijaw and Agbarha-Urhobo respectively). They said the ownership entitled them to the rents and profits accruing from the land. The Judge, His Honour, Mr. Justice A. F. C. Weber ruled in favour of Dore stating that Dore and not the plaintiffs, is the person the government recognized as the head of the Itsekiris, meaning as Ikime points out, Dore Numa's appointment as Paramount Chief was put over Itsekiri laws and customs. The case was lost on appeal by the plaintiffs. However in a consent agreement, sponsored by Lieutenant Governor Colonel H. C. Moorhouse in 1924, an Olu Trust Fund was set up. The fund was to receive five - sixths of the rents, leaving one-sixth for Dore Numa.

The first case to be instituted against Dore by a non-Itsekiri was by the Agbarha-Urhobo for the lease of their lands to the colonial administration without their consent and payment of compensation. This was the case of Ogegede v Dore Numa in 1925. Agbarha claim was for rents for Leases B2 and B5 and injunction against Dore not to lease Agbarha lands without their permission. The trial judge dismissed the case off hand without going into the merit because in his view:

“The local (and legal) position of the defendant (Dore) was on 1st February, 1924 finally laid down by the Full Court in Denedo v Dore Numa. That decision has been acted upon by the Executive without any opposition or criticism until the filing of this case which if successful would strike at its very roots."

Maxwell J. went further to state:

“I do not consider it necessary to call upon the defendant or witnesses. The onus of proof is on the plaintiffs and they have in my opinion significantly failed to discharge it.”

Thus the Judge proceeded to deliver judgment on 6/11/25 in a case that opened the previous day 5/11/25. What follows is even more startling as the Judge blasted the Agbarha-Urhobo plaintiffs:

“The claim seems to me both idle and preposterous. The fact that they have made it at all (and of that I can take judicial cognisance) had caused no little local excitement and has to a certain degree dislocated trade and might even have led to a breach of the peace.”

The Judge stated that the legal position of Dore had been laid down in Denedo v Dore Numa but he failed to avert his mind to the fact that this was a case between Itsekiris to which the Ijaws and Urhobos were not parties therefore, whatever decision arrived at in that case should not be binding on them. Before now the only important legal test Dore faced was Denedo v Dore Numa and as said this was an in-house affair between Itsekiris. When the real opposition came from the Agbarha-Urhobo who were not Itsekiris the colonial administration felt it necessary to nip the emerging threat in the bud. Maxwell J. castigated the Agbarha-Urhobo plaintiffs as senile, abysmally stupid and ignorant for instituting the action. No reference was made to the evidence of witnesses called by the Agbarha-Urhobo except in partisan generalizations. The Agbarha-Urhobo called 11 witnesses viz: 5 from Agbarha, 4 from Effurun and 2 from Ugberikoko. One and all the witnesses stuck to their guns and refused to accept that the Agbarha people got permission from any Olu to settle in Warri or that they paid tribute to anyone including Chief Dore. Indeed they said that they did not know of any practice of one community paying tribute to another in the neighbourhood of Warri, Effurun, or Okere.

Ogegede was prodded to accept the same settlement arrived at in Denedo v Dore Numa (copy of judgment even admitted as exhibit) but he declined it thereby towing a line different from his lawyer who was willing to compromise on the issue by accepting the Moorhouse settlement in Denedo v Dore Numa whereby the Agbarha-Urhobo could stay on the land but recognize the overlordship of the Olu Itsekiri. This was taken to mean that the Agbarha-Urhobo could embarrass the government if they won. T .D. Maxwell had to see to it that it did not happen. The issue whether or not the court had jurisdiction to enquire into the distribution of rents accruing from the leased lands was not gone into at all. The suit was dismissed out of hand. Excerpt from the suit will throw light on whether or not the Agbarha-Urhobo were senile, abysmally stupid or ignorant as they were labeled by the Judge:

OGEGEDE: “The Agbassa people came from Agbassa Oto. Ona was one of their leaders; Another was Aba: another, Imone; I was born at Agbassa town. My father I know. He was also born there. Since I had any sense I have never heard of the Agbassa Oto people ever left Agbassa except to build neighbouring village. Rents were never paid by the Agbassa people to anyone: neither was any tribute. No one has ever attempted to drive us away from this land.”
On cross-examination:

“Agbassa people were never given permission by the Olu to dwell on the Agbassa land. The Agbassa people owned the whole of what is now Warri. When the European came here I was frightened to claim any of the land. I feared the European would kill me and take the land by force. I mean the government. I still think the government is capable of killing me by hanging or otherwise and then stealing all my land.

”OGUDE: I was born at Agbassa. The first people to settle there were Aba: Ona: Imone … All the Agbassa people agreed to this case being brought. We never paid rents or tributes to anyone: We lived died and were buried on Agbassa land. 

Cross-examination: “When the people of Agbassa Oto wanted to set up a new ruler they did not ask the Olu of Jekri for permission. When the three men named came to Agbassa they found no-one in Warri. There was no Olu. There was no one to prevent them seizing the whole of what is now Warri. It is not a fact that Agbassa people have paid tribute to the Olu of Jekri for permission to stay on their land.

OKUMA CROSS-EXAMINED: My folk came from Agbassa Oto. I am a Sobo. I see many Jekris in Warri. Formally there were none. The whole of Warri and suburbs is ours. It does not include Okere. The Agbassa did not pass the creek. Odion is Agbassa land. The people there are Jekris. They pay no rents to Agbassa people. They came there long after the Agbassa people: so did the Okere people. The Olu of Jekri came afterward too: I know the Agbassa people came before he did. Some of them went to Itele and elsewhere: I don’t know if they got the Olu of Jekri’s permission to immigrate: If they say they did they lie.

AJENELE: I live at Effurun … I was born at Effurun … going by the Sapele Road from Effurun one passes the Agbassa land. I do not know if any one had ever paid anyone any rent in respect of this land at any time. I have never heard of anyone receiving any rent for any land anywhere (sic) No one in Warri has ever paid rent to anyone. Why should they? I have never heard of anyone else by way of paying rent.

CROSS-EXAMINED: If Agbassa people were to go to old Warri and pay tribute to the Olu of Jekri I would Know. The Agbassa’s boundary is with us on the Sapele Road:
RE-EXAMINED: Before the Government came here the Agbassa people paid no rent to anyone.

IDE: I live at Agbassa … Before the Agbassa people lived there we got no permission from anyone to live there. We never rendered services to anyone for the privilege of living there.

CROSS-EXAMINED: By the Agbassa land I mean the whole of Warri ... When Chief Dore’s father died Agbassa people did not go and cut grass to show they were paying tribute. When Chief Fregene died they did not cut grass. Chief Ekene did not recently send to us to come and cut grass.

RE: EXAMINED:
If my ancestors had cut grass we would have heard.
SAM WARRI: I know the Agbassa land leased to Government. It is real Agbassa land.

AGBEDOLA: I live at Abeo Koko in Warri. I was born there. I render no service to any one for living there. I have never heard of anyone in Warri rendering any services to any one for the land on which they live.

CROSS-EXAMINATION: I am not the head man of Abeo Koko. I have never heard of any Sobo people paying tribute to the Olu of Jekri for or doing work for him. No one has ever done such a thing in this neighbourhood.

OWONYONG: I live at Abeo Koko. I was born there. I have always lived there. We pay rent to nobody for living on that land. Had any such services been rendered I would have to know.

AKPOJOTO: I live at Effurun … I was born at Effurun. I have always lived there. We Effuruns pay no rent to anyone: nor do we pay tribute to anyone for living there. I know of nobody in Warri or the neighbourhood who rendered services for living on his land. I have never heard of such thing.

CROSS-EXAMINATED: Effurun is not Agbassa land. I am not a chief. There are chiefs at Effurun. I am not a head man.

RE-EXAMINATED: If Effuruns had to go it would be the common people like me and not the chiefs who would have to go and work.

CHEDIAMUREKE: I live at Effurun … I was born at Effurun. I have always lived there. Effurun people render services to no body for occupying Effurun land. I know no one in this neighbourhood who render any services to anybody for occupying land.

PESSA: I live at Effurun .... I was born at Effurun and have always lived there. There I have my farm and house. I know the Effurun people render services and pay tribute to no one for living in Effurun on one near Warri who render services for their land.

The position of the Agbarha-Urhobo that they got no permission to settle in Warri or pay tribute to any one gets credence from no other person than Dore Numa himself. In the Warri Native Court Suit No. 788/27 Nikoro of Okere v Okumagba of Okere, the defendant (an Urhobo) was ordered to pay £5 as rent to the Plaintiff (an Itsekiri). An appeal was lodged with Warri Native Court of Appeal. The President, Chief Dore Numa himself ruled:

"The Jekri and Sobos have been living together without question of one paying rents to the other and cannot do so now”.

It is instructive that this judgment was delivered by Dore Numa after Ogegede v Dore Numa was decided wherein Dore stated under oath that the Agbarha-Urhobo pay tribute as settlers. This statement by Dore Numa later played a pivotal role in determining the outcome of the subsequent case of Idundun v Okumagba decided after independence by a Supreme Court peopled by Nigerian Justices. This suit was instigated by the Itsekiri Communal Land Trust against the Okere-Urhobo claiming over-lordship over them and their lands a claim which the Supreme Court rejected.

In another summersault, Chief Dore again in his evidence in chief in Ometan v Dore Numa 18/11/29, another suit instituted by the Agbarha-Urhobo against him said inter alia:

"Ogbe Ijoh are Ijaws. Olu gave them permission. Olu gave all Sobos permission. Olu gave Agbassa. Whatever Sobos collected in way of fish, yams, and palm nuts they brought to the Olu. I was told so. I am a successor of Olu. I have received tribute from Effurun, and all the Sobos here including Agbassa."

Under cross-examination by Zizer, counsel for Agbarha-Urhobo Dore said:

"All Sobos in Warri District render me service. They bring to me anything as tribute."

From the contradictions above it is clear that Dore was not a witness of truth but someone who acts according to how the situation suits him. At times he acts the script of the powers that be and on other occasions he follows the dictates of his conscience or desires. Due to the status of Dore as Political Agent combined with British imposed doctrine of feudal “overlordship” which made a separation of possessory title of the land from administrative jurisdiction impossible, legal actions challenging this status quo were therefore implicitly a challenge to the colonial administration, and probably fated to failure.

To buttress the fact that Dore was acting in cahoots with the colonial administration and solicited and got assistance from it in his numerous litigations, the following correspondence between the parties are instructive:

Odogene Town,  
        Warri,
        23 February, 1922

To His Honour,
Colonel H.C. Moorehouse, C.M.G.
Lieutenant Governor,
Southern Provinces.

Sir,

I have the honour to inform you that the Ugborodo land's case had been over and judgment was given in my favour by the Judge with 100 guineas costs. They have not paid the amount up to the present moment.

The people of Agbassa sued me also when the above case was on for £330 three hundred and thirty pounds being rent of their land paid by the Government for 11 years at £30 per annum. This case was dropped by them when I succeeded in the former case and for my trouble in the case the Judge ruled that ten guineas should be paid to me. This they have not paid as yet. The only land at Agbassa that late Chief Ogbe and I leased to Government 11 years ago is the land now used as the cemetery. I am not aware when the Government took other land at Agbassa.

The Government on his last tour to Warri was petitioned by the people of Agbassa about their land. The then Resident (Mr. Hives) told them that the matter did not worth any while and after some time Mr. Wood the then District Officer told them that I leased the land to Government hence they have the boldness to sue me the other day. The Judge also ruled in the Ugborodo land's case that all lands belong to the Olu and as Head of the Olu family I am therefore in charge of all lands.

I understand it is the intention of the people of Agbassa to issue fresh summons to me but at present I cannot say what nature of summons it is.
I therefore beg to bring these matters up for your information as you are in charge of this province with a view of knowing your opinion and I hope Sir you will not consider that I am troubling you. Moreover I bring up these matters by virtue of my office for all things have gone amiss in this province for the past two years.

        I have the honour to be,
Sir,
         Your honour's most obedient Servant,

(Sgd). Dore
          Paramount Chief.

Writer
A. A. Ogedengbe
Gratis
Odion Town, Warri.

Resident
Warri.

I discussed this with you. Chief Dore was present. No action can be taken until the Agbassa people make a definite move. I understand Dore has already instructed Mr. Graham Paul. I have wired to Lagos to have all deeds & c dealing with the Government acquisition of land at Warri collected to await my return.
(Intd) H.C.M. (Moorehouse)
25.2.22

However, the relationship between the British and Dore was not without its ups and downs especially as regard lands which the government encroached on without putting Dore in the know and giving him his usual cuts and which the government requires Dore to defend in court in the ensuing litigation started by the land owners. Some of these unsavory situations led Dore to make some damning admissions against himself to spite the British whom he felt cheated him. The following letters authored by Dore and sent to the counsel to the Agbarha and Okere people is most instructive in this regard:

From: Chief Dore Warri January 9th 1923.
To: Mr. S.L. Bucknor_Warri

Dear Sir,

I beg through you to inform your clients, the people of Okere, that I claim no title whatever to Okere land, either to my private capacity or as a member and representative of the Jekri Olu family. That Okere land belongs to Okere people, though the Olu of Jekri has always had sovereign rights over all lands in Warri but such rights have nothing to do with ownership or title to land.

That I have collected no rents from the government in respect of Okere lands, but a present of 20 pounds was made by the government to me in respect of the area on which the prison and gang drivers quarters are erected, and this amount I am ready and willing to pay over to Okere people.

I remain, Dear Sir,
Yours faithfully,
(Sgd) Dore


From: Chief Dore
Warri February 28th 1923.

To Mr. S. L. Bucknor,
Warri.

Dear Sir,

I beg through you to inform your client the people of Agbassa that I claim no title whatever to Agbassa land either in my private capacity or as member and representative of the Jekri Olu people that Agbasah land belong to Agbasah people although the Olu of Jekri has always had sovereign rights over all land in Warri but such rights have nothing to do with ownership of or title to land.

I remain,
Dear Sir,
Yours faithfully,
        (Sgd) Dore.

Sgd. E. G. Ajuya
Writer.

From: The Commissioner of Lands Lagos
To: The Resident, Warri Province Reference your W. 555/1923.

This constitutes an entirely new development in the history of Warri land viewed in the light of past history the action of Chief Dore is inexplicable. For years he has contested his right to proprietary interest in the land.

It is difficult, therefore to understand why Dore made such a damning admission against himself.

However, the effect of the admission would appear to be contrary to the judgment of the Supreme Court in the "Forcados Case" Chief Dore Vs Chief Olue and others.

His honour has requested more detailed information as to the circumstance under which the letter containing Dore’s admission was written.

Would you therefore be so good as to thoroughly investigate the matter. It is suggested that an interview with Dore might put a totally different complexion on the business.

(Sgd.) W.J. Fitzagerald
Ag. Commissioner of Lands

Another memorandum from the Commissioner of Lands, reference 661/72/1923 dated 16th October, 1923 is also reproduced under:

FROM THE COMMISSIONER OF LANDS, LAGOS
TO THE SECRETARY, SOUTHERN PROVINCES, LAGOS

I attach memorandum and enclosures from Resident, Warri.

2. This constitutes a new and amazing development in the intricate history of Warri Land. The effect of Dore's admission is contrary to the judgment of Supreme Court in the Forcados case.

3. Moreover, as the whole question is the subject of litigation, the settlement will have to receive the consent of Court.

4. It is difficult to understand why Dore made such a damning admission against himself.

5. Last year Dore tried to go back on certain deeds of conveyance to Government but was unsuccessful and it may be that now he thinks he is placing Government in an awkward situation by his admission.

6. The Resident is not very informative and he does not make any comments in his covering memorandum.

7. For the moment the whole position is too vague to form the subject of a memorandum reviewing the position of Government in the light of the latest development.

8. I propose to write to the Resident for more detailed information on receipt of which I will submit a memorandum dealing with the question.

9. In the meantime I think you ought to know how this matter stands.

(Sg) W. J. FitzGerald
Commr. Of Lands

One will notice that the Commissioner for Lands wonders that Dore made "this damning admission against himself" and notes that the Resident is incommunicado. The Lt. Governor, not even the Resident, had to come down from Enugu to carpet Dore Numa compelling him to continue the litigations. Dore had no alternative but to continue the fight as the colonial government’s lackey or proxy.

In the mean time we will pursue further Dore's reluctance to pursue Suit W/25/26 Ometan v Dore Numa instituted by the Agbarha people. The letter which Dore wrote to S.L. Bucknor has come to be known as Letter 'C'. Letter 'C' in the same terms was written to Okere people as shown above. Whilst it was overlooked as exhibit in Ometan v Dore Numa it was held valid in negotiations between the Government and Dore on one hand and Okere people on the other to stave off court action. As a result in 1930 the Okere people themselves signed the lease agreement giving the land to government over which the present Okere Prisons stand, not Dore. The Agbarhas on the other hand, lost to Dore Numa in 1929, in Ometan v Dore Numa despite Letter 'C' which the court decided Dore did not understand what he signed. Dore won again in 1931 when the Agbarha people appealed to the Full Court (colonial Supreme Court).

Two events now took place. Firstly, it had been known that the exact boundaries of Lease B7 part of the subject matter of Ometan v Dore Numa were not known. Although Dore should be expected to be happy for winning all the way there was concern whether Dore would agree to sign a deed of rectification. In a minute dated 3rd March, 1932 from Mr. Shepard to the Secretary Southern Provinces he says inter alia:

"The Northern and Easter boundaries of this lease were indefinite and it was approved at Page 88 in S.P. 3958 Vol. 11 (attached) that a correct plan of the area should be attached to the original deed under a memorandum of agreement signed by the Governor and Chief Dore the only surviving lessor. That was in 1929. It took two years to complete the negotiations and produce correct deed plans.

"3. It may happen that Chief Dore will now refuse to sign the deed." On 21st April 1932 Mr. Shepheard reported to Secretary Southern Provinces that "Chief Dore has signed the Memorandum of Agreement under which a correct plan of the area of Lease B.7 is attached to the original deed."

Dore was not lying in 1922 when he informed the Lt. Governor that the only land at Agbassa that he and Ogbe leased eleven years before was that used as African Cemetery (located at present Cemetery Road, Warri), this parcel of land being only about half an acre. The plan of the leases makes it clear that Dore was telling the truth. By Agbassa land in this context he meant Lease B.7 containing Agbassa Village. The only known boundaries of this were the common Western boundary with lease B.2 and the common Southern boundary with Lease B.5. The rest then marked A, B, C, D, on the plan was open. By undertaking the survey and negotiations between 1929 and 1932 the area of Lease B.7 came into existence, effectively included among the other leases, after the judgment in the Divisional and full Courts, respectively. Secondly, the evidence of Plaintiffs, the Agbarha people in suit No. 25/1926 agrees with Dore's letter that Dore did not undertake Lease B.7 and also that he was being prodded by the Administration against his will: OMETA (evidence in Chief on 15/11/29, Divisional Court Warri).

"…When Government came they called Igbe head of Agbassa. They made a paper with Igbe which is burnt. This is a long time ago and Government have been there since. I bring this action because I discovered nine years ago defendant was leasing our land to Government. We started building again and the Resident and District Officer stopped us. We again complained to Dore and he sent the same reply. We were stopped the third time. Chief Dore arranged to meet us at Miller Brothers Wharf. We went with Chief Dore to the Resident. Dore told us that Government said he was not to give up the land and that Government would stand by him. Dore said he would see Governor but when Governor came he never went to see him so we took this action."

Esi (Sam Warri) (18/11/29, evidence in chief) "l live at Egudu village. I am Sobo. I am Agbassa. I farm near my village at Fugbe. My ancestors have farmed there. I was present at an Agbassa meeting. We were stopped three times by Government from building and we went to Chief Dore because we heard he had leased to Government. Chief Dore went to the Resident. He said that Resident told him not to mind what we said. Dore promised to see the Governor but when the Governor came nothing happened so we brought this action."

These witnesses who seemed to be reciting Dore's letter to the Lt. Governor of course did not know that Dore had written such a letter. It is also noteworthy that the cost of defending the appeal filed by the Agbarha against the decision of the Full Court at the Privy Council in 1931 was borne by the government on behalf of Dore who refused to pursue the appeal allegedly on grounds of penury. He may have refused also because he knew he had a bad case and was tired of being prodded. In a minute by Secretary Southern Provinces Sir William Hunt to the Lt. Governor on 24th March, 1932 he wrote -

"Leave to appeal to the Privy Council has been granted the Agbassahs who are said to be raising the money. Dore and the Jekris however are tired of the whole business, & say they can afford no more.

"Regarding Dore's professed inability to raise further funds Y.H. I think spoke to Mr. Bush of the Colonial Office in Lagos. Mr. Bush told me that the Privy Council was always sympathetic to anyone genuinely pleading poverty and that he did not think that Dore's case would suffer if he did not appear or even if he sent no representative but simply a letter. Mr. Bush said also that the P.C. seldom turned down a case that had passed from the Divisional Court through the Full Court without any modification. Our experience however in Nigeria in connection with land cases has not been too happy.

"Personally also I am not so sure that Dore will succeed. On Jan 18th 1923 Dore wrote to the people of Okere (p 74 in fl S.P. 90) and said that he claimed "no title whatever to Okere land, either in my private capacity or as a member and representative of the Jekri Olu family." "That Okere land belong to Okere people, though the OLU of the Jekri has always had sovereign rights over all lands in Warri, but such rights have nothing to do with ownership or title to land."

"Now on 9th Sept 1915 in consideration of £20 Dore executed a deed of surrender of a piece of land near Okere for warders quarters. A5 (1(4) of p. 41 in fl S.P. 90), but in view of Dore's disclaimer in 1923 a new deed was made between the Okere people and the Government on 27/8/30 for this same land and a piece on the opposite side of the road. The deed is B9 and a copy is at the back of S.P. 8263.

"On 28 February 1923 Dore wrote a letter to the Agbassah people in terms similar to those used in his letter of the previous month, to the Okere people saying that he as representative of the Jekris had sovereign but not possessory rights over Agbassah land (p.69 in fl S.P. 90). No judicial or official notice seems ever to have been taken of it, the land on which Agbassah Village is built and the farming land round it, more especially in view of Government's action in connection with the Okeres concerning the land for warders quarters. I suppose it is rather rash of me to write like this after learned judges have thrashed the matter out in Court, but when the Full Court talks of Dore's overlordship I wonder whether he had any more claim to lease the land actually in beneficial occupation by the Agbassah Sobos than the Oba of Benin could have to lease the land beneficially occupied by the Jesse Sobos.

"Further I am impressed by the sacrifices, made over so long a period and in the face of all the weight of several judgments of Court, by this tiny village, and their determination to make further sacrifice in defence of what they deem to be their heritage. Nor do I think that Dore and the Jekris would be as resigned to spending no money if they felt the same as the Agbassas regarding the ownership.

"However, I am perhaps talking academically, when there is Y.H.'s concrete question to answer. Personally I would be inclined to follow Mr. Bush's hint and let Dore sue in forma pauperis, sending a detailed statement of his case. I should not be disposed to spend Government funds in an action of this nature. Government to my mind should be entirely impartial in the matter. If Dore has been led by Government support in whatever way it may have been lent, to take the case from court to court and to spend large sums in fees, and if before the P.C. he should fail eventually, then to my mind the Government should recoup him for his past expenses, and generously. But unless and until judgment goes against Dore, I do not think that it is right for the Government to help him with financial or other support. It can of course retain counsel to hold a watching brief for the Crown, but in view of my S.3 p.54 I do not think that is necessary."

On 25th March, 1932 the Lt. Governor minuted inter alia "I agree with you that Dore's success is not at all assured. I think he should be advised to appear in forma pauperis if he cannot or does not wish to proceed further owing to financial difficulties." Dore Numa died on 24th September, 1932. Notwithstanding the fact that OLU FUND had been set up in November 1924 no Itsekiri took interest in the appeal. In 1933 government was forced to approve £300 for the cost of the appeal. On 12th April, 1934 the Secretary Southern Provinces recommended an increased amount of £400 to the Lt. Governor who at any rate approved £300.

From the foregoing, it is obvious that it was actually Ometan v the Crown rather than Ometan v Dore Numa. The outcome was therefore a foregone conclusion as the Privy Council ruled in favour of the Crown, sorry Dore, notwithstanding the damning admission in “Letter C”. This is the case that the Itsekiri now trumpet as the British Privy Council validation of their claim to ownership of Warri and on the basis of which the subsequently inaugurated Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust descended on Agbarha lands in Warri, leasing same to themselves and members of the public without payment of compensation to the Agbarha-Urhobo.

In the light of the foregoing, it is clear that Dore Numa was a creation of the colonial government. He was opposed by both Itsekiri and Urhobo alike. He never lost any of his cases even in the face of self-incriminating evidence. The irony is that although he was vehemently opposed and rejected until his death by the Itsekiri establishment, the same Itsekiri establishment is now ready to die defending the accidental windfall of Dore Numa’s dalliance with the British Colonialists – overlordship of Olu Itsekiri over all lands in Warri Division.

In summation, Dore Numa was used to acquire lands for Government Station in Warri by the British, and earned the stigma of a knave but was backed up and fully protected by the power of his masters. Hence as an event, Dore Numa was an expression of British Colonial interest, the tool of the Western Niger Delta peoples’ subjugation to become a part of the British Empire. The Itsekiri themselves rejected his role. However, as a result of the Lugardian policy of indirect rule the British strove to veil their interest and actions in the name of Itsekiri custom because Chief Dore happened to be Itsekiri. In this way, Chief Dore was said by them to represent the Olu to own all lands in Warri Division in trust for the Itsekiri people. Then it suited the British to call Urhobo and Ijaw lands occupied by them as Itsekiri lands under Dore's control. At the passing away of Dore, in order to lie consistently, Dore's overlordship over land was passed to Olu Fund and subsequently to the Itsekiri Communal Lands Trust. Naturally the Itsekiri grabbed it. They were rid of the burden of Dore as a person. But they acceded to his legacy of 'national' assets, the leases.