๐ฑ โChaos at the Palace! Daddy Lumbaโs Funeral Date Abruptly Changed as Manhyia Palace Steps In โกโ
For weeks, Ghanaians had been preparing themselves emotionally for the farewell of one of the nationโs most beloved artists, Daddy Lumba.

His death had united fans across regions, faiths, and generations โ a rare moment of collective mourning in a country so often divided.
Tributes poured in from presidents, fellow musicians, and ordinary fans who grew up to the soundtrack of his timeless voice.
The funeral committee โ composed of family members, industry figures, and local leaders โ had worked tirelessly to create what they promised would be โa fitting tribute to a national treasure.

โ The date had been announced, preparations underway, invitations printed.
Everything seemed set.
And then, out of nowhere, came the decree.
A statement from Manhyia Palace, concise but heavy with implication, declared the funeral committee dissolved and the planned date invalid.
No explanation.
No warning.
Just royal authority โ absolute and final.
Within hours, the airwaves were ablaze.
Radio hosts dissected every line.
Social media went wild with theories.
Had there been disrespect to the Asante traditions? Had the committee overstepped its bounds? Or was something deeper unfolding behind closed palace doors?
Insiders close to the Palace spoke in cautious tones.
According to one source, the committee had โfailed to consult properlyโ with the Manhyia authorities, a critical misstep considering Daddy Lumbaโs strong cultural and traditional ties to the Ashanti region.
โYou cannot plan such an event without the blessing of Manhyia,โ the source said.
โItโs not just about respect โ itโs about heritage.
Others whisper of power struggles between the musicianโs family, local traditional leaders, and government officials who wanted control over the high-profile event.
One version suggests that the original committee had invited dignitaries and performers without seeking royal clearance, an act perceived as a direct affront to the Asante hierarchy.
โThey treated it like a music festival,โ said a palace insider.
โBut to us, it is a sacred rite.
The palace had to act.
The reaction from the public was instant and divided.
Some saw Manhyiaโs decision as rightful โ a move to restore dignity and cultural order to the ceremony.
Others called it interference, accusing the palace of politicizing grief.
Fans flooded X (formerly Twitter) with angry messages: โDaddy Lumba belongs to the people, not to protocol!โ one wrote.
Another retorted, โWithout Manhyiaโs blessing, no final rite is complete.
โ
Meanwhile, the dissolved committee remains in shock.
One member, speaking anonymously, described the moment they received the news: โWe were in the middle of a meeting when the letter arrived.
It felt like the air was sucked out of the room.
Months of work โ gone in one sentence.
โ They added that no one from Manhyia had contacted them beforehand.
โIt was justโฆ over.Like we were erased.
Behind the tension lies a deeper story โ one that touches on Ghanaโs delicate balance between modern celebrity and traditional authority.
Daddy Lumba was not only a pop legend but also a proud son of Ashanti soil, deeply connected to the royal traditions of his people.
To the Palace, his farewell is not merely a concert of remembrance โ it is a cultural rite that must follow sacred order.
โThis is not Accra showbiz,โ one royal aide said sharply.
โThis is Asanteman.
But those close to the late musician say that Lumba, in life, valued freedom โ in music, in art, in expression.
โHe believed his music transcended borders,โ said one longtime friend.
โHe would not have wanted his funeral to become a power contest.
โ And yet, that is precisely what it has become.
The streets of Kumasi are buzzing with speculation.
Posters advertising the old funeral date have been taken down.
Vendors who had begun selling commemorative merchandise are now in limbo.
Hotels that had been fully booked report mass cancellations.
โWe were ready for thousands of people,โ said a hotel manager.
โNow, nobody knows when or how it will happen.
Family members of Daddy Lumba have remained mostly silent, but subtle cracks are showing.
His cousin, speaking to a local journalist, said, โWe respect Manhyia.
We will obey.But we are heartbroken.
The confusion is painful.
โ Another relative hinted at internal divisions, admitting that โsome wanted the Palace involved earlier, others didnโt.
Now we are paying the price.

As the public waits for a new date, rumors swirl that Manhyia is forming its own royal-led committee to oversee every detail of the ceremony โ from the musicians who will perform to the colors of the fabrics to be worn.
โThey want everything done properly, the Asante way,โ said an insider.
โEvery song, every drumbeat, every libation โ it must honor both the man and the ancestors.
โ
While this may sound noble, not everyone is convinced.
Critics argue that the Palaceโs involvement will transform what should be a peopleโs celebration into a tightly controlled royal ritual.
โLumbaโs magic was that he belonged to everyone,โ said one Accra-based DJ.
โNow it feels like weโre being told how to mourn.
โ
In the midst of all this, the emotional weight of the story cannot be ignored.
Fans continue to light candles, play his songs, and share memories online.
Videos of Daddy Lumbaโs performances โ the smooth voice, the electric charisma, the mischievous smile โ have flooded social feeds, turning grief into a digital wave of nostalgia.
His music, as if aware of the chaos surrounding his name, echoes through speakers and car radios like a ghostly reminder of what truly matters.
Thereโs an irony in all of this.
The man whose songs once bridged divides โ between love and heartbreak, between tradition and modernity โ now lies at the center of a divide that even he might not have been able to heal.
But maybe, just maybe, this storm will give way to a deeper reflection on what legacy really means in a country still learning how to balance its royal past with its modern identity.
For now, the new date remains unannounced.
The Palaceโs silence feels deliberate โ a reminder of who holds the final word.
The family waits.
The fans hold their breath.
The country hums to the tune of his memory, restless, suspended between mourning and anticipation.
When the funeral finally happens, one thing is certain: it will not just be the burial of a legend.
It will be the closing act of a drama that has revealed not only the fractures within Ghanaโs power structures but also the enduring spell of a man whose voice refuses to die.
In the end, Daddy Lumbaโs story โ even in death โ is still writing itself.
And the whole nation is watching, waiting for the next note.