New gay activist Chief who fell from palanquin removed
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The popular Nigerian born British LGBT+ rights campaigner, Davis Mac-Iyalla who was installed as a traditional chief at Yamonransa in the Central Region of Ghana during the weekend is no longer a chief.
The chiefs have stripped him of that title and reversed his installation on the grounds that he did not reveal his true identity to them.
According to the chiefs, they had known him only as Kweku Adu, a resident of Cape Coast for the past 10 years but only got to know that he was also known as Davis Mac-Iyalla, an LGBTQIA+ rights activist only a few moments to the installation at the weekend.
In view of that, they have decided to reverse the process and that Mac-Iyalla cannot refer to himself as a chief anymore.
“During the process of his installation as Amankorehen, (Nkosuohen – Development chief), information came that Kweku Adu is also known as Davis Mac-Iyalla and has been supporting LGBTQIA+ and it’s related activities,” the chiefs said at a press conference on Tuesday (January 31, 2023).
“Immediately this information came to our attention, we called for the whole process of Mac-Iyalla to be halted. We wish to state that no title has been conferred on him as Amankorehen of Yamonranza in view of the latest information about him and does not carry any such title as Amankorehen,” they said.
Graphic Online’s Shirley Asiedu-Addo reports from Cape Coast that following the uproar that followed the installation of Davis Mac-Iyalla as Amankorehen of the Nkusukum Traditional Area in the Central Region, the Traditional Council has retreated from the action saying Mac-Iyalla is not yet conferred with the title.
The popular gay activist was outdoored at a ceremony at Yamonransa during the weekend under the stool name Nana Kweku Gyasi I.
But at a press conference Tuesday, Nana Okese Esandoh IX, Paramount chief of the Nkusukum Traditional Area said the traditional council was not aware that Mac-Iyalla was a gay activist and had thus refrained from conferring that chieftaincy title on him.
“We wish to state that no title has been conferred on him as Amankorehen of Yamonransa in view of the latest information that reached us about him and does not carry any such title as Amankorehen” he stated.
He explained that he got to know Mac-Iyalla through some friends in Cape Coast who recommended that he had been supportive with developmental projects.
He said he discussed the issues with the Ebusuapayin (family head) of Yamonransa to install him as Amankorehen to help with the area’s development.
Among others he indicated that the Amankorehen was to organise the African-American people who have traced their roots to Yamonransa to support the area’s development.