The final resting
place for former National Security Adviser (NSA), General Andrew Azazi, who
died in a helicopter crash, is now shrouded in controversy, with elders, chiefs
and youths of his oil rich Peretorugbene community, in Bayelsa State, have cautioned
against his burial in Yenagoa.
They said that the repercussion of such action might be grievous
for their community. Speaking with Saturday Sun, Chief A. Ebikake, a senior
chief in the community and Tubereoke Azazi, a member of the Azazi family, said
lessons learnt from the burial of the grand father of the late Gen. Azazi, Pa
Azazi, in a neighbouring community of Egbemo-Angalabiri, is enough to caution
those planning to bury the late general outside his community. They said that
the late General Azazi personally supervised the exhuming of his grand father’s
corpse for proper burial when it became obvious that the wrongful burial site
caused untold hardship to the community.
“We the chiefs, elders and youths of Peretorugbene community are
not against our son’s burial in Yenagoa, but what we are against is the
repercussion that would follow. It is on record that the late Azazi’s grand
father, whose name he chose to answer instead of his own father, James, as is
practised in Ijaw nation, was also a victim of wrong burial. He was wrongfully
buried in Egbeme-Angalabiri and his body was later exhumed for proper burial,
after series of calamity befell the Azazi family and this action was supervised
by the late General.
“He was a man in touch with the tradition of his people and we
cannot fold our hands and watch a few individuals who are uninformed to ruin
our land.” They berated the late General’s wife and children for their plan,
insisting that they would boycott the burial activities lined up if the
decision is not reversed. “We are aware that his wife is not an Ijaw lady, but
from the Itshekiri stock, which prompted her decision to tell Army authorities
that the final resting place of her husband will be in Yenagoa, but we expect
those close to her to educate her.
Ijaw nation has traditions and culture, which we cherish so
much. It is by Ijaw tradition that the larger family, the community and members
of a bereaved family determine the final resting place of the dead, but these
people violated all this to tell the world that our illustrious son would be
buried in Yenagoa without consultations. We want to warn here that anyone who
buries Gen. Azazi in Yenagoa does that at his or her own risk.”
Source: Sun
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