Controversy has continued to trail the Will of the late Igbo leader, Dim Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu barely 48 hours after it was read.
The Will which stated that his first son, Sylvester Ojukwu, has no place in his multi-million property has raised more dusts than expected.
However, countering the content of the Will, Sylvester, who claimed he
is richer than his father, doubted the authenticity of the Will, saying
that it was concocted.
Sylvester said, “even if it is true, I am worth over N3 billion, which is more than the assets mentioned in my father’s Will”.
Referring to the Will as fake, the first son of the War lord said it
looks very suspicious, “I am surprised, and I doubt that the Will was
drafted by my father. It was a concoction.
The Will seemed to have been drafted in hurry by people desperate to
achieve an aim. But, if it is the true Will of my father, I have no
problem with that. After all, this is not the first time a first son is
disinherited from his father’s Will. If truly my father disinherited me
from his Will, that does not stop me from being Ojukwu’s first son,” he stated.
It would be recalled that Sylvester once dragged his family members
to court for not allowing him to perform the ‘dust to dust’ rites during
the interment of the late Biafran leader.
But fighting back at the present situation, Sylvester, a legal
practitioner said that through a DNA test one could lose his paternity
if it is proved that he is not the rightful child of his father.
However, in the controversial Will, the late Eze Ndigbo willed his
estate and monies to former beauty queen, Bianca, and appointed her, the
late Igwe of Oraukwu, Emeka Ojukwu and James Chukwuneme as trustees and
executors of the documents.
Ikemba also clearly stated in his Will that only eight people should be regarded as his bonafide children.
The list of the chosen children includes, Teni Hamman, Emeka Ojukwu, Mmegha, Okigbo, Ebele, Chineme, Afam and Nwachukwu.
Although only one of Ojukwu’s children was present when the Will was
read at the Enugu High Court on Friday, other share holders were urged
by the court to apply for copies of the Will as well as the codicil,
which was prepared by one Barrister Emeka Onyemelukwe on December 16,
2009.
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