In an interview on Arise Television on Saturday, Osuntokun
said Afenifere was not envisioned as a social-cultural group limited to the
south-west.
“Afenifere of our own description is not a social political
organisation, the ambiguity came when Chief Awolowo started Egbe Omo Oduduwa.
He also founded Afenifere, but people tend to confuse the two,” he said.
“Afenifere founded by Awolowo is actually the political arm
of any party that Afenifere would join. It is actually a political party.
“That is the conception of the man who started it. In 1963,
he made a presidential address and called anybody who associates Afenifere with
the Yoruba people a traitor.
“He also said anyone who calls Afenifere a socio-cultural
group is a traitor; go and read his presidential address in 1963.
“I keep seeing this: Afenifere is not a social-cultural
group. Part of the reason why people get it confused is that during the long
interregnum of the military in power, you cannot have a political party, so
that was the cover under which the politicians of the left of the centre
gathered to talk because effectively it was a political pressure group.”
On January 29, the Reuben Fasoranti-led faction of Afenifere
said there is “only one authentic” pan-Yoruba socio-political organisation.
The group’s comment came on the heels of the appointment of
Dele Farotimi, a human rights advocate, as the national organising secretary of
Afenifere by the Ayo Adebanjo-led faction.