Nigeria’s former President, Obasanjo’s Father allegedly an Igbo Prince

Date: 01-11-2010 12:17 am (13 years ago) | Author: Daniel Bosai
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- at 1-11-2010 12:17 AM (13 years ago)
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Is the former Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Okwudili Onyejekwe the father of former President Olusegun Obasanjo? The pictures of the two statesmen show a striking resemblance, but that is no DNA proof.  This puzzle has remained for several years, with the former president keeping sealed lips, until last week Thursday. At a book launch in Lagos, Obasanjo said he is not an Igbo man and that the former royal father who has been mentioned in some quarters as his father, is really unknown to him. Obasanjo spoke during the presentation of a book on him titled “Baba’s Story: Nigeria is 50.” The book is written by a Ghanian, Abyna-Ansaa Adjei.

Three years ago, The Nation had published the picture of the former Obi of Onitsha who some people claimed was Obasanjo’s father. It was alleged that the Obi, who died in 1970, was an Igbo police officer who lived in Abeokuta around 1930s, the period the former President was born. He was alleged to have had a fruitful affair with an Owu woman. He later became the Obi  of Onitsha, but as a prince, was prevented by the dictates of tradition, from marrying a woman alien to the custom of Onitsha  people. Obi Onyejekwe, described by those who knew him as a tough, domineering and a quarrelsome leader, had ruled Onitsha from  1962 to 1970. Palace sources remember him for his mood swings and strength of character.

Last week, Obasanjo tried to put the debate in the trash bin by affirming his Yoruba ancestry.  He said: “I was born in a village called Ibogun-Olaogun in what was then Abeokuta province and which today is part of Ifo Local Government Area of Ogun State.”

At least, the former President is the only highest living authority that can talk about his own origin. No one else is better placed, since the late Obi of Onitsha and Obasanjo’s mother are no longer alive.

Obasanjo spoke last week about his rise from a poor, backwater village boy, who later became twice the leader of Nigeria and one of the country’s most vilified figures. He said: “This village is only 30 kilometers from Abeokuta. As a child, I lived in Ibogun-Olaogun with my parents and my younger sister, Oluwola. Our childhood was a simple one spent in a typical Nigerian farming settlement. Our village had less than 50 huts built with mud walls and mostly thatched roofs and the only jobs at the time were farming or petty trading in farm products. By age five, I started going to the farm and that was when he began to teach me about the history, culture and traditions of my ancestors and our land. Our village, though small, was composed of other ethnic groups such as Itsekiri, Urhobo, Igbira, Hausa, Igbo and Ijaw who were also either petty traders or farm hands.”

He said his father was by every measure the most successful farmer in the village at the time. He described him as a “proud Yoruba man and he told me about Oduduwa, the founder of the Yoruba nation. Papa had heard this story from his own father, Baba Alarobo, who had heard  from his father, Baba Elesin.”

However, historians may need to do more research  about Obasanjo’s origin.

Historians may need to dig deep to establish if the issue is a matter of a biological father whose offspring was adopted by his mother’s relations, after all, adoption legally speaking would make him to permanently cut the cord that links him with his taproot.

Like every leader of his status, many are anxious to see the picture of Obasanjo’s father and to read more about the missing links of the former President’s paternal ancestry, which the new book seems not to have fully unraveled. Perhaps the late Obi of Onitsha’s resemblance of the former President is likely to be one of the world’s most intriguing cases of look-alike, that is, if Obasanjo’s claims are true.  But if those questioning his origin are correct, yet without a DNA proof, it means Obasanjo’s bona fide lineage may remain one of Nigeria’s best kept secrets.

Source: THE NATION TRUTH IN DEFENCE For FREEDOM  http://thenationonlineng.net/web3/news/17573.html


Posted: at 1-11-2010 12:17 AM (13 years ago) | Addicted Hero
- moniconyez at 1-11-2010 02:17 AM (13 years ago)
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WATEVA....................
Posted: at 1-11-2010 02:17 AM (13 years ago) | Hero
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- DonFranklin at 1-11-2010 05:04 AM (13 years ago)
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Like we care?
Posted: at 1-11-2010 05:04 AM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- ajanni at 1-11-2010 07:21 AM (13 years ago)
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i am not so suprise anyway , since actions speaks louder even than voice
Posted: at 1-11-2010 07:21 AM (13 years ago) | Grande Master
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- marysmile at 1-11-2010 08:43 AM (13 years ago)
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 Grin no time yet
Posted: at 1-11-2010 08:43 AM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- dollar22 at 1-11-2010 09:11 AM (13 years ago)
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anugo"m
Posted: at 1-11-2010 09:11 AM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- mystangel at 1-11-2010 09:48 AM (13 years ago)
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no point ..who cares

Posted: at 1-11-2010 09:48 AM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- tonyanthony at 1-11-2010 10:24 AM (13 years ago)
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who his father was,were he is from is nt our problem let him jst live his life and go
Posted: at 1-11-2010 10:24 AM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- debuchi at 1-11-2010 10:49 AM (13 years ago)
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I will be back soon, Am busy
Posted: at 1-11-2010 10:49 AM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- sweetgift at 1-11-2010 11:36 AM (13 years ago)
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so whatz my business
Posted: at 1-11-2010 11:36 AM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- tambeiort at 1-11-2010 12:23 PM (13 years ago)
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they resemble true true ooh........... Shocked
Posted: at 1-11-2010 12:23 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- bafyguy at 1-11-2010 12:29 PM (13 years ago)
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what is my business there
Posted: at 1-11-2010 12:29 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- Doweller at 1-11-2010 01:20 PM (13 years ago)
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Ohooo!
Posted: at 1-11-2010 01:20 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- divineproject at 1-11-2010 01:33 PM (13 years ago)
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Wonder why people love digging into people's past............would the knowledge change who OBJ is?

Posted: at 1-11-2010 01:33 PM (13 years ago) | Hero
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- Eucharia at 1-11-2010 02:29 PM (13 years ago)
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so, who cares
Posted: at 1-11-2010 02:29 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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- kingroony at 1-11-2010 02:40 PM (13 years ago)
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the two of them look like monkey but the father is more hansome than baba
Posted: at 1-11-2010 02:40 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
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- nice9ija at 1-11-2010 03:29 PM (13 years ago)
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na them sabi jore
Posted: at 1-11-2010 03:29 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- ajanni at 1-11-2010 04:35 PM (13 years ago)
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you sabi am too ooo, small boi ,
Posted: at 1-11-2010 04:35 PM (13 years ago) | Grande Master
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- frenzeecool_08 at 1-11-2010 05:10 PM (13 years ago)
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Journalists with their cooked stories just 2 sell tabloids. The afct that ppl are look alike does not mean they are related and everybody knows this. I see no cause for making any noise out of this. I believe the only motive for this is for the financial gains of the journalists
Posted: at 1-11-2010 05:10 PM (13 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- SirJ at 1-11-2010 05:21 PM (13 years ago)
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 I personally don't see anything bad in the Info. More investigations please.

I just don't like being held in the dark..be enlightened!
Posted: at 1-11-2010 05:21 PM (13 years ago) | Upcoming
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