Less than 24 hours after it was read in the Enugu High Court in
Nigeria’s South-East, the will of late Igbo leader, Dim Chukwuemeka
Odumegwu-Ojukwu, has been dismissed as strange and unreliable by one of
his closest confidants.
The name of Chief Sylvester Debe
Odumegwu-Ojukwu, the 56 years old lawyer reported to be Ojukwu’s first
son but who has had running battles with other family members since the
old man’s death on November 26, 2011, is conspicuously missing from the
will. Recognised as Ojukwu’s children in the will are Chukwuemeka Jnr,
Mmegha, Okigbo, Ebele, Chineme, Afam, Nwachukwu and one Tenny Haman, who
was previously unheard of.
Commenting this morning on the will,
Uche Ezechukwu, Ojukwu’s biographer and one-time media aide, said:
“Ojukwu’s will has been read and it gave nothing to his sons and almost
everything to his widow. Is that not
strange?
“Could Ojukwu, who
was blind for four years before his death and had all but lost his
memory, have written such a will with his senses intact? Just thinking
aloud!”
Ezechukwu, a seasoned journalist and public analyst whose
book ‘Ojukwu, the Rebel I Served,’ has received much praise, insisted
that he knows all of Ojukwu’s children and that Sylvester is one of
them.
According to the man who served as Ojukwu’s Speacial
Assistant on Media for some two years: “The Ikemba had the following
children: Sylvester, from an Udi woman when he was an Assistant
Divisional Officer there; then Emeka Jnr, Mmegha (the first daughter)
and Mr. Okigbo from Njideka (Ned Onyekwelu); Ebele from Stella (née
Onyeador) and then the three kids from Bianca.”
Responding to
questions and observations made by some of those who responded to his
Facebook post, Ezechukwu said: “Accordingly, the will gave the family
compound to Emeka. The Ikemba I knew understood Igbo culture very well
and knew that you can’t will out your traditional compound as it
automatically goes to the first son, who holds it in trust for the
family. It continues to be held in trust by every first male child. So
in practical sense, Emeka got nothing! Very abnormal!
“A man’s
ancestral house is not part of the will. The first son automatically
inherits it. That is the house you say he willed to Emeka. What of
Okigbo and Sylvester?”
Ezechukwu, who is also Coordinator of the
League of Anambra Media Professionals, advised that “the nation should
get ready for perhaps the longest playing soap opera that will rubbish
and dwarf all those acclaim we have had for Ojukwu.”
“I knew this
rumpus would erupt and when I was writing my book on him, I dodged
everything about his family,” he wrote. “I was there and knew his
relationship with all his children before Bianca came. I didn’t want to
become the source of the storm that started breaking even before the
mourning dress was shed.”
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