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Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos - Crime (5) - Nairaland

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Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by stanluiz(m): 9:18pm On Mar 16, 2018
TheKingIsHere:
The funny thing is that the yorubas don't know who there real enemies are.

Have you heard of yoruba and ijaw clash of recent?
Or igbo yoruba clash?

Very confused set of people.
No hausa Fulani is their friend and brothers.Ask obj and tinubu they will you more

Shebi Lagos state sign a business agreement with kano a parasitic northern state instead of anambra,rivers or any se or ss state last month this is to tell you that they don't see the north as their enemies. Simple!

8 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by nkwuocha1: 9:19pm On Mar 16, 2018
Onijagidijagan:

Did Fulani chased Yoruba out of Ilorin? kwara states is bigger than d entire Igbo land d Yoruba rule all towns(Oba) except Ilorin which the king is Yoruba to me and has Yoruba name.


You make slavery a good thing with your exertions .
Smh

8 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Nobody: 9:21pm On Mar 16, 2018
lastempero:


Its only on nairaland.enter street u go know howfa
Not on nairaland alone o...some Igbo people have said many tribalistic things to me when I was in d east, my ear was full and it hasn't ceased.
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by stanluiz(m): 9:23pm On Mar 16, 2018
Onijagidijagan:


Hausa people are our best friend, it's just unfortunate dat is a fight BTW mere street people. it will be resolve.

Yoruba love Hausa people.
Wow!! master and slave issue will be resolved just like that.
una mata just tire me.

8 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Zither(m): 9:23pm On Mar 16, 2018
Onijagidijagan:

Has an Igbo man won any war in the history of Nigeria?

Tell that ur stupid brother that Yoruba did not participated in Biafra war, had been they did, there won't be an Igbo man left in Biafra land.

We r patiently waiting for d war so that u coward will burry ur head in sand and leave our lands.

What war? At best ignore my Igbo brothers. Asking for war is like hitting your head against the wall at hearing the voice of an Igbo person. So immature. Don't let this online rivalry get into your head.

1 Like

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Okeikpu(m): 9:24pm On Mar 16, 2018

10 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Owamudia: 9:25pm On Mar 16, 2018
AFONJAPIG:
hehehehe we all heard how it happened @ mile12 market they chase u inside lagoon

A mile 12, the abookis were being annihilated until security personnel came to assist them. cool

Fact! cool

1 Like

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Aziishyco(m): 9:25pm On Mar 16, 2018
Fadiga24:

Always the result
this pic cracked me up...lol������
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by GMbuharii: 9:25pm On Mar 16, 2018
Owamudia:


Must you post like a lunatic

If you read the story, you will see that Yorubas had the upper hand.

shattap dia,read which story? Didnt the story read that the hausa small boy BEAT UP AND DISGRACE THE ALARIWO yoruba boy? Didnt the story read that the agbero later went to cry to his fellow agberoes who gathered,as usual, in their numbers?
Lazy things.
"Ahhhh!" "Emi!"
"AHHHHHHHHHH..."

grin grin grin

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Nobody: 9:26pm On Mar 16, 2018
nkwuocha1:



You make slavery a good thing with your exertions .
Smh
Your tribe defined slavery. has for Ilorin we love it that way.

No Fulani man has ever said is not a Yoruba land. the peaceful coexistence in Ilorin is more than anywhere in Nigeria. that's why is called " the state of harmony "
Igbos are d Yoruba's problem in Nigeria and in Oduduwa republic.
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by AFONJAPIG(m): 9:26pm On Mar 16, 2018
Owamudia:


A mile 12, the abookis were being annihilated until security personnel came to assist them. cool

Fact! cool
hehehehe the reverse was the case, some Yoruba ppl even change their names just to escape from the carnage

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by emmysoftyou: 9:26pm On Mar 16, 2018
stanluiz:
I thought they say we don't respect our host but we have never fight any physical battle but Hausa that always fight with them in the SW did they also respect their host ?
not fighting them does not mean you have respected the host of the land but insulting them continually by calling them cowards and other names not welcomed shows that you are dissing the host of the land..

Let love lead rather than ethnicity.
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by GMbuharii: 9:27pm On Mar 16, 2018
Coneheads right now grin grin grin

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Owamudia: 9:27pm On Mar 16, 2018
stanluiz:
No hausa Fulani is their friend and brothers.Ask obj and tinubu they will you more

Shebi Lagos state sign a business agreement with kano a parasitic northern state instead of anambra,rivers or any se or ss state last month this is to tell you that they don't see the north as their enemies. Simple!

What else can I expect from a pained, jealous, inconsequential 5 percenter grin

2 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Nobody: 9:29pm On Mar 16, 2018
Owamudia:


A mile 12, the abookis were being annihilated until security personnel came to assist them. cool

Fact! cool
Leave the coward..one day it will be Igbo and Afonjas..they will beg the WHO and is real that day grin
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Owamudia: 9:30pm On Mar 16, 2018
AFONJAPIG:
hehehehe the reverse was the case, some Yoruba ppl even change their names just to escape from the carnage

Whatever makes you feel good grin It doesnt change anything. cool
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Awoleesu(m): 9:30pm On Mar 16, 2018
Alex80s:
'' First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Socialist.

Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Trade Unionist.

Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.'' Will the 'Jagabam' speak for the Yoruba's?
Deep!
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by stanluiz(m): 9:31pm On Mar 16, 2018
Owamudia:


What else can I expect from a pained, jealous, inconsequential 5 percenter grin
Skull miner go and suck your master ball.
shey Hausa are your friends

6 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Owodiran1(m): 9:31pm On Mar 16, 2018
nkwuocha1:
Lol.

It's just a joke Jare.Them just dey play. It's nothing serious. grin grin grin grin

Fighting with Yoruba man is quite exhausting. To me it's a total waste of time and suspense.

At the end of the day, bottles go full everywhere. No blood. undecided
please try and fight a mushin or bariga or ajegunla guy wey be yoruba. You go know say nah bottle and blood flow
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Owamudia: 9:33pm On Mar 16, 2018
GMbuharii:


shattap dia,read which story? Didnt the story read that the hausa small boy BEAT UP AND DISGRACE THE ALARIWO yoruba boy? Didnt the story read that the agbero later went to cry to his fellow agberoes who gathered,as usual, in their numbers?
Lazy things.
"Ahhhh!" "Emi!"
"AHHHHHHHHHH..."

grin grin grin

Maybe the Yoruba boy was smaller in size and the abooki wanted to use that to ride him? Even in boxing, we have categories.

And weren't the abookis chased away

Don't be a numbskull!
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by nkwuocha1: 9:33pm On Mar 16, 2018
Onijagidijagan:

Your tribe defined slavery. has for Ilorin we love it that way.

No Fulani man has ever said is not a Yoruba land. the peaceful coexistence in Ilorin is more than anywhere in Nigeria. that's why is called " the state of harmony "
Igbos are d Yoruba's problem in Nigeria and in Oduduwa republic.





THE rivalry between the Fulani and Afonja descendants over the throne of Ilorin is rooted in history.
While the Fulani rest the case of their claim to the kingship of the ancient town on the fact that the monarch had from the time immemorial been produced by them, the Afonja descendants, who like majority of the people of the town are Yoruba, say since their ancestor founded Ilorin, their claim to the throne ought not to be disputed.

History appears in support of the former's position although the progenitor of the Fulani indigenes of Ilorin, Alimi, was actually a tenant to Afonja.

The death of Afonja and Alimi, however, saw the eldest son of the latter emerging as the first monarch of what was then known as Ilorin.

Historical sources, tracing the story to the 19th Century, said Ilorin of today was founded by Afonja, the then Aare Ona Kakanfo (Generalisimo) to Alaafin of old Oyo (Oyo Ile), who used the town as his military outpost. It was this outpost that he carried out his war expeditions for the Alaafin. In the usual nomadic wandering, Alimi arrived Ilorin and was hosted by Afonja. Soon after Alimi took Ilorin as his place of abode, a rift broke out between Alaafin and Afonja. When the disagreement reached the climax and the two had to take up arms, Afonja, out of regard for Alimi's spiritual and military prowess, sought his support. Alimi helped in mobilising an army in support of Afonja leading to victory over Alaafin. The defeat led the then Alaafin migrating from old Oyo to the site now called Oyo.

After the war, Alimi became a teacher to Afonja's children as the latter wanted his offsprings to learn the secret of power. When both died, Alimi's son, Abdulsalami, inherited his father's duty of teaching Afonja's children.

When the idea of appointing somebody to head the village came, the eldest child of Afonja wanted to have the position but met opposition from Abdulsalami who had military support from his fellow Fulani kinsmen. Abdulsalami ultimately became the ruler of what is now called Ilorin around 1831.

The issue now is that Afonja's descendants believe that their forefathers were cheated and want a redress. But the Alimi people are claiming that the Afonja people never ruled Ilorin and, as such, no precedent exists to back their position.

Penultimate week's incident was not the first time the Afonja and the Yoruba would attempt to assert their right to Ilorin kingship.

Historical sources said in 1895, the Yoruba rose against the then emir, burnt his palace and killed him. But the revolt did not result in enthronement of a Yoruba king. In 1913, when Lord Lugard administered the northern and southern Nigeria, Yoruba were said to have spearheaded a riot over tax to bring the rulership of the then emir to ridicule. In 1936, the Yoruba, according to sources, also moved to oust Emir Abdulkadir who was banished to Kaduna but got reinstated by the colonial administration.

In 1978, the George Innih administration of Kwara State raised a judicial panel of inquiry to look into the Yoruba agitation.

The Yoruba people reportedly made a case for the merging of Kwara State with the Southwest before the commission while also laying claim to the Ilorin throne. It was said they even claimed antecedent to the throne as they allegedly said Yoruba had produced four obas in Ilorin before the advent of the Fulani. But the Alimi people, in a counter position, claimed there was no known Yoruba king in the town before their forefather mounted the throne.

The report of the panel never saw the light of day while there was also no white paper from government.

A twist to the tussle was the recent petition by three of the six Yoruba chiefs (mogajis) in Ilorin to the State House of Assembly complaining that they had been classified as ungraded by government allegedly at the behest of the emir. Their non-grading, according to the chiefs, suited the emir, so that there would be no rivalry of any sort from the Yoruba to his authority. Ilorin Descendants Progressive Union (IDPU), formed to protect the interest Ilorin indigenes who are of Fulani extraction, once in its opposition to the upgrading of the chiefs, said dong so would bring them at par with Gambari. But the Afonja Descendants Union (ADU) which came on stream in 1978 to advance the cause of the Yoruba in the town and with Kasumu as its leader would hear none of that. The group is allegedly pressuring the legislature to grade the chiefs.

Another angle to the agitation is the demand for Oya State that will comprise the Yoruba speaking areas of Kwara and Kogi States. The move, it was said, is to pull the rug from under the feet of the emir and end the Fulani rulership of Ilorin.

The Yoruba people of Ilorin are not alone in the struggle. The pan-Yoruba meeting which took place in Ibadan last year demanded restructuring of Kwara State such that Ilorin would be grouped with the Southwest. Analysts interpreted this to mean that the parley did not believe that any emir had any business on Ilorin throne.



https://www.ilorin.info/fullnews.php?id=10472

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by stanluiz(m): 9:34pm On Mar 16, 2018
Onijagidijagan:

Leave the coward..one day it will be Igbo and Afonjas..they will beg the WHO and is real that day grin
Go and fight and defeat the alimajari first before they install another emir SW cheesy
Onijagidijagan:

Leave the coward..one day it will be Igbo and Afonjas..they will beg the WHO and is real that day grin
Go and fight and defeat the alimajari first before they install another emir SW

6 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Owamudia: 9:34pm On Mar 16, 2018
stanluiz:
Skull miner go and suck your master ball.
shey Hausa are your friends

The same balls ibos have been desperate to suck since PMB was declared winner in 2015

Keep consoling yourself... grin
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by GMbuharii: 9:34pm On Mar 16, 2018
Onijagidijagan:

Did Fulani chased Yoruba out of Ilorin? kwara states is bigger than d entire Igbo land d Yoruba rule all towns(Oba) except Ilorin which the king is Yoruba to me and has Yoruba name.

if there is a yourobba king in ilorin,who is EMIR SULU GAMBARI,THE EMIR OF ILORIN?
grin grin grin

5 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by dasparrow: 9:35pm On Mar 16, 2018
I am not surprised. It is a well known fact that Nigerians are generally tribalistic towards each other and don't like each other. So, why won't they fight and act a fool? Later, they go deceiving themselves shouting "One Nigeria."
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Nobody: 9:35pm On Mar 16, 2018
Zither:


What war? At best ignore my Igbo brothers. Asking for war is like hitting your head against the wall at hearing the voice of an Igbo person. So immature. Don't let this online rivalry get into your head.
is beyond online my brother

the hate is in politics

Christianity

Entertainment industry

Igbo holding meetings with non Yoruba tribes on our land to fight non Yoruba agendas on our lands etc
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by nkwuocha1: 9:35pm On Mar 16, 2018
Onijagidijagan:

Leave the coward..one day it will be Igbo and Afonjas..they will beg the WHO and is real that day grin



Igbo and Yoruba ke? grin grin grin grin grin grin

2 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by stanluiz(m): 9:35pm On Mar 16, 2018
nkwuocha1:






THE rivalry between the Fulani and Afonja descendants over the throne of Ilorin is rooted in history.
While the Fulani rest the case of their claim to the kingship of the ancient town on the fact that the monarch had from the time immemorial been produced by them, the Afonja descendants, who like majority of the people of the town are Yoruba, say since their ancestor founded Ilorin, their claim to the throne ought not to be disputed.

History appears in support of the former's position although the progenitor of the Fulani indigenes of Ilorin, Alimi, was actually a tenant to Afonja.

The death of Afonja and Alimi, however, saw the eldest son of the latter emerging as the first monarch of what was then known as Ilorin.

Historical sources, tracing the story to the 19th Century, said Ilorin of today was founded by Afonja, the then Aare Ona Kakanfo (Generalisimo) to Alaafin of old Oyo (Oyo Ile), who used the town as his military outpost. It was this outpost that he carried out his war expeditions for the Alaafin. In the usual nomadic wandering, Alimi arrived Ilorin and was hosted by Afonja. Soon after Alimi took Ilorin as his place of abode, a rift broke out between Alaafin and Afonja. When the disagreement reached the climax and the two had to take up arms, Afonja, out of regard for Alimi's spiritual and military prowess, sought his support. Alimi helped in mobilising an army in support of Afonja leading to victory over Alaafin. The defeat led the then Alaafin migrating from old Oyo to the site now called Oyo.

After the war, Alimi became a teacher to Afonja's children as the latter wanted his offsprings to learn the secret of power. When both died, Alimi's son, Abdulsalami, inherited his father's duty of teaching Afonja's children.

When the idea of appointing somebody to head the village came, the eldest child of Afonja wanted to have the position but met opposition from Abdulsalami who had military support from his fellow Fulani kinsmen. Abdulsalami ultimately became the ruler of what is now called Ilorin around 1831.

The issue now is that Afonja's descendants believe that their forefathers were cheated and want a redress. But the Alimi people are claiming that the Afonja people never ruled Ilorin and, as such, no precedent exists to back their position.

Penultimate week's incident was not the first time the Afonja and the Yoruba would attempt to assert their right to Ilorin kingship.

Historical sources said in 1895, the Yoruba rose against the then emir, burnt his palace and killed him. But the revolt did not result in enthronement of a Yoruba king. In 1913, when Lord Lugard administered the northern and southern Nigeria, Yoruba were said to have spearheaded a riot over tax to bring the rulership of the then emir to ridicule. In 1936, the Yoruba, according to sources, also moved to oust Emir Abdulkadir who was banished to Kaduna but got reinstated by the colonial administration.

In 1978, the George Innih administration of Kwara State raised a judicial panel of inquiry to look into the Yoruba agitation.

The Yoruba people reportedly made a case for the merging of Kwara State with the Southwest before the commission while also laying claim to the Ilorin throne. It was said they even claimed antecedent to the throne as they allegedly said Yoruba had produced four obas in Ilorin before the advent of the Fulani. But the Alimi people, in a counter position, claimed there was no known Yoruba king in the town before their forefather mounted the throne.

The report of the panel never saw the light of day while there was also no white paper from government.

A twist to the tussle was the recent petition by three of the six Yoruba chiefs (mogajis) in Ilorin to the State House of Assembly complaining that they had been classified as ungraded by government allegedly at the behest of the emir. Their non-grading, according to the chiefs, suited the emir, so that there would be no rivalry of any sort from the Yoruba to his authority. Ilorin Descendants Progressive Union (IDPU), formed to protect the interest Ilorin indigenes who are of Fulani extraction, once in its opposition to the upgrading of the chiefs, said dong so would bring them at par with Gambari. But the Afonja Descendants Union (ADU) which came on stream in 1978 to advance the cause of the Yoruba in the town and with Kasumu as its leader would hear none of that. The group is allegedly pressuring the legislature to grade the chiefs.

Another angle to the agitation is the demand for Oya State that will comprise the Yoruba speaking areas of Kwara and Kogi States. The move, it was said, is to pull the rug from under the feet of the emir and end the Fulani rulership of Ilorin.

The Yoruba people of Ilorin are not alone in the struggle. The pan-Yoruba meeting which took place in Ibadan last year demanded restructuring of Kwara State such that Ilorin would be grouped with the Southwest. Analysts interpreted this to mean that the parley did not believe that any emir had any business on Ilorin throne.



https://www.ilorin.info/fullnews.php?id=10472


Facts are stubborn

4 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by stanluiz(m): 9:36pm On Mar 16, 2018
nkwuocha1:



Igbo and Yoruba ke? grin grin grin grin grin grin
Hahahahahahahahahahahaha

2 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Owamudia: 9:37pm On Mar 16, 2018
stanluiz:
Go and fight and defeat the alimajari first before they install another emir SW :DGo and fight and defeat the alimajari first before they install another emir SW

Sharrap!

The whole SE is already Fulani grazing reserve so much so that the Fulanis said they didnt need any cattle colonies there... grin

2 Likes

Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by Nobody: 9:37pm On Mar 16, 2018
GMbuharii:


if there is a yourobba king in ilorin,who is EMIR SULU GAMBARI,THE EMIR OF ILORIN?
grin grin grin
Yoruba man. his descendants might be Fulani but his more Yoruba than me. you removed his Yoruba name "Kolapo" why?
Re: Panic As Yoruba, Hausa Clash In Lagos by nkwuocha1: 9:38pm On Mar 16, 2018
Owodiran1:
please try and fight a mushin or bariga or ajegunla guy wey be yoruba. You go know say nah bottle and blood flow
Even inside that munshin and ajegunle. Igbo boys wey dey there are blood thirsty.They understand Yoruba and know where una power start and end. E get anywhere for Lagos igbo never penetrate?

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