The Northern Region House of Chiefs has rescheduled to another date, its ruling on the decades’ old chieftaincy row in the North East Region town of Bunkpurugu.
The Judicial Committee has now set August 29, as the new date to make public, its decision on the 33-year-old conflict between the Jamong and Jafouk families in Bunkpurugu.
Earlier in the day, armed police personnel were deployed at the premises of the Northern Region House of Chiefs in Tamale, as the Judicial Council prepared to deliver its ruling on the dispute.
It followed the wave of renewed fears of possible violence among residents.
JoyNews correspondent in the North East Region, Eliasu Tanko, reports Thursday, the development has compelled the District Security Council to convey more than three emergency meetings in the last seven days.
Several meetings have been held with the feuding parties and both have to accept any outcome of today’s sitting by the Judicial Committee of the House of Chiefs, the District Chief Executive (DCE) for the area, Majeed Duut told JoyNews.
Peace talks by peace-building organisations including, the Regional Peace Council and West Africa Network for Peacebuilding (WANEP), have also been on the beat to prepare the minds of the relatives and sympathisers of the factions.
Majeed Duut said, though there has been no report of “bad signals”, the security personnel would remain on high alert.
He advised residents to “think about what the district has suffered” and embrace peace and give chance for development and progress.
Violence
There has been sporadic violence since 1986 when members of the Jamong family petitioned the House Chiefs after the Naayiri’s decision to select a member of the Jafouk family to occupy the Bunkprugu skin.
Both families are members of the Louk clan of the Bimoaba ethnic group with the same ancestral roots believed to hail from a village called Loukporuk in neighbouring Togo but the Jamong family argued, it was the first to settle in Bunkprugu and therefore, the only legitimate family to occupy the skin.
Although there are other clans within the Bimoba ethnic group such as the Buuk, Temong and the Bawk, the Louk clan was first to settle in Bunkpurugu and therefore, became the caretakers.
Hostilities renewed in 2006 when another member of Jafouk family was again enskinned by the Naayiri.
Protests
The Jamong family is asking the House of Chiefs to determine the true royals of the Bunkprugu skin and declare the Naayiri, overlord of the Mamprugu traditional area, unfit to select Bunkprugu chief.
The family accepts the Naayiri as the landlord of the entire but protests his decision to meddle in the Bunkprugu chieftaincy successions.
Impact
According to National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO (2015), Bunkpurugu/Yunyoo District since 1985-2015, recorded 21 ethnic conflicts in different communities, which led to the loss of many lives as well as displacement of some members to other communities.
Communities such as Jimbale, Kambatiak, Kpemale and Bunkpurugu recorded over 50 dead victims, 857 houses burnt.
At some 13,768 people migrated to other neighbouring communities, regions and nearby communities such as Nankpanduri, Tamale, Brong-Ahafo, Accra, Togo and Burkina Faso between 2007 and 2015, to save their lives, the Ghana News Agency reported.
According to the Ghana Education Service (GES) in the Bunkpurugu/Yunyoo District, the conflict between Bimobas and Komkobas in Kpemale resulted in the death of two pupils and a teacher.
That led to the closure of Kpemale D/A Primary School, the only primary school in the community for two years.
The school which had a total enrolment of 394 pupils before the clashes in 2010 and 2011, has seen the numbers reduce drastically following the conflict.