Home » King Angenu Alabi Installs Sakumono Divisional Traditional Council Chief

King Angenu Alabi Installs Sakumono Divisional Traditional Council Chief

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His Majesty Nii Angenu Alabi Gbene III, the Sakumono Divisional Chief/ Mantse, has installed a Noryaa Mantse (Developmental Chief) to join him and the Sakumono Divisional Traditional Council to achieve his Developmental agenda for his kingdom.

The traditional ruler installed the businessman and entrepreneur at a colorful event held on Friday August 16th, 2024 in Ghana.

The newly installed Chief with stool name Nii Sakumono Okpelente I Noryaa Mantse and is known in his private life as Amb. Oloye Oyeyemisola Fatuyi FIIM, JP.

The newly installed Chief and business man pledged to work with the community leaders, District Assembly, Government, religious heads, Youths, Business community, NGOs, Market people, and everyone to bring about development, unity, peace, and love to the community at large.

Addressing the traditional council and the Kingmakers, Nii Sakumono Okpelente I Noryaa Mantse, thanked the Sakumono Mantse, the elders, and the Kingmakers for the opportunity to be installed as new chief of the Sakumono community.

He openly pleaded with everyone to join hands and support him to build a better and glorious Sakumono town, and to vibrantly work together to bring back the community into reckoning just like it was previously.

According to the new chief, Sakumono is a blessed and divine land with wonderful people and hardworking youths; he further said, Sakumono is now open for investments.

He stressed the need to make use of the beaches and the vast landscape for eco-tourism, industrial hubs, and fish farming.

However, he noted that the youths, women, and everyone deserve a better life, and he promised to commence skill acquisition programs of all kinds to equip people within the town to be able to vend for themselves without waiting for anyone.

The event was witnessed by the Chiefs, Queen mothers, the Business community, professionals, the Nigerian and American diasporan organizations, African Ancestral Wall management, Clergymen, and traditional dancing groups from both Ghana and other places.

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