11/08/2020
Oli Ekpe Custom of Nnewi People in Anambra State
There is a custom in Nnewi, Anambra State, called Oli ekpe. According to this custom, women are excluded from inheriting landed property. Thus, if a man dies his property belongs to his male issue or his brother if the deceased has no male child. Women are completely excluded from inheriting the property of the deceased.
In Mojekwu v Mojekwu, the Court of Appeal declared that Oli ekpe which bars women from inheriting landed property is repugnant to natural justice, equity and good conscience. The court struck down the custom.
There was a World Conference on Women in Beijing, China, in 1995. Mojekwu v Mojekwu came to the Court of Appeal during the period. Thus Justice Niki Tobi, J. C. A (as he then was) would say, ‘We need not travel all the way to Beijing to know that some customs … are not consistent with our civilised world in which we all live today, including the appellant. In my humble view, it is the monopoly of God to determine s*x of a baby and not the parents. Although the scientific world disagrees with this divine truth, I believe that God, the creator of human beings, is also the final authority of who should be male and female. Accordingly, for a custom or customary law to discriminate against a particular s*x is to say the least an affront on the Almighty God Himself. Let nobody do such a thing. On my part, I have no difficulty in holding that the Oli ekpe custom is repugnant to natural justice, equity and good conscience’.