Tag: Ogbomoso

  • Expand Ogbomoso dam

    SIR: In the 1960s pipe borne water was adequately supplied to all the nooks and crannies of Ogbomoso metropolis. Taps were running well. Today, the status of Ogbomoso has changed from what it was in the 1960s. It now has five LGAS, two in the city centre and three in the periphery. Its population has surged. It boasts of a state owned university, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, (LAUTECH) and a host of other privately owned institutions of higher learning.

    Water supply to the city centre is so poor that less than 20% of the inhabitants have access to pipe borne water not to talk of the periphery. Ogbomoso is the second largest city after Ibadan, the capital of Oyo State. Water supply in Ogbomoso began to drop from 1983 when it was alleged that the powerful engine meant for its extension was carted away by unknown people. The situation became worse in the 1990s.

    Asejire water dam is about 25km from Dugbe in Ibadan. Pipe borne water is supplied to Dugbe and the encompassing areas from Asejire. What is good for the goose should be seen to be good for the gender. Water is life. This essential public utility is indeed needed by all the inhabitants of the five Local Government Areas that make up Ogbomoso geo-political zone.  We appeal to the federal and Oyo State governments as well as international bodies to rescue us from water borne diseases by expanding Ogbomoso water dam so that water supply could be extended to about 30km radius. By this, taps will run in towns like Iregba, Iresaadu, Oko, Ajaawa, Odooba, Iwo Ate, Idewure, Dada and others while people’s longevity will be greatly enhanced.

     

    • Adelani Olawuyi

    Odooba – Ogbomoso,

    Oyo State.

  • Adekunle: Ogbomoso mourns its dearest son

    Adekunle: Ogbomoso mourns its dearest son

    He fought the Nigerian civil war like a true soldier  and in the process raised the popularity of Ogbomoso, his home town. As the curtain falls on the life and times of Brigadier-General Benjamin Adekunle who passed on September 13,, BISI OLADELE reports on the mood in the town and among his kinsmen.

    The rustic town of Ogbomoso in the northern part of Oyo State wore a somewhat mourning look. Residents were quick to notice visitors who came to learn more about one of the heroes of the Nigerian civil war who hailed from this city of warriors, home to the last but one Aare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland, the late Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola.

    “Oh, you came for Benjamin Adekunle? Their house is right down in the town.” These were the common words of residents to visitors who went to Ogbomoso last week to inquire more about the fallen gallant soldier, Brig.  Benjamin Adekunle.

    Ogbomoso, the second largest town in Oyo State, has produced many heroes. It was home to the late Chief Samuel Ladoke Akintola, the polyglot political titan who co-piloted the affairs of the Western Region with the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo in the First Republic.

    The town caught the attention of Nigeria again last week when another of its heroes, Gen Benjamin Adekunle, passed on. Adekunle, the civil war hero and master strategist died after a five-year battle with sickness.

    Just as his death has been the common talk on the lips of many Nigerian adults across the country, so it has been among indigenes and residents in the town.

    His kinsmen at Ijeru,  Ogbomoso embraced The Nation reporter with both arms when he visited and were eager to conduct him round the cluster of old houses that made up the Otun Agoro Compound, where the war veteran hailed from. The compound which is located around the centre of the town, is adjacent to the palace of the Onpetu of Ijeru. Gen Adekunle hailed from Ijeru, Ogbomoso.

    “A great hero, a good man is gone.” “We have lost a great man.” So said relatives of the deceased who lived around Adekunle’s father’ house. “He loved us and we all loved him.” They said with enthusiasm. They stressed that they would all miss the great man of war.

    The monarch, who is another affable and accommodating elite, spoke glowingly about one of his most famous subjects. While recalling with glee his efforts to make the late war hero retrace his roots and resettle in Ogbomoso, Oba Sunday Oladapo Oyediran, also shared his pains on how the death finally brought his efforts, which were spurred by shared vision of other stakeholders in the community, to naught.

    He said: “Benjamin Adekunle was  a notable son of Ijeru, Ogbomoso, Oyo State and Nigeria. We have lost a gem. There is no doubt about that and the feeling is not unexpected. It is a feeling of a great loss to the community and it came at a time when we least expected him to pass on because we are just about enjoying him when he left us. Prior to now, he was not used to Ogbomoso though he hailed from this town but throughout the better part of his life, he was not used to Ogbomoso. But when I came on board in 1999, I went looking for him and I was able to bring him back home. So, he was planning to settle down at home when death snatched him away from us. It was great loss to us.

    “He started coming home when we met him and that was when we knew that he even had some properties in town not being catered for. He left those properties in the care of relations and when he came back some of the relations had annexed some of them to themselves. You know the mentality of the average African man when you leave your property uncared for. He was at the verge of ironing out some disputes on those properties when he felt sick. We were praying that he would come out of the illness, but the sickness took him up to three or four years. Unfortunately death took him away. My position is that if we cannot enjoy him during his life then we should have his corpse as a reverence point to generations unborn that here lies the remains of our hero.”

    The monarch disclosed that the deceased did not build a house in Ogbomoso. He likened Adekunle to a prodigal son, who decided to come back home after a long sojourn outside the town.

    “His story can be likened to that of a prodigal son who went on a journey and decided to come back home. There is this adage in Yoruba that says “Ajo o le dabi ile,” (meaning there is no place like home). So, the time he realized that he needed to trace his roots, when we made him realize the importance, he agreed with us and decided to return home, and have a house of his own here in Ogbomoso. The properties I was referring to are just virgin landed properties. He was yet to build a house. So, a land that is not developed cannot be referred to as an estate, so they are just landed properties. Though well documented, but they were not developed. The time he was planning to come and develop some of these properties was when he took ill.”

    Asked whether Adekunle disclosed to him the reason he did not build a house in Ogbomoso, the monarch said: “Yes, his interests for this country made him to forget that he was even from Ogbomoso because he was one of those Nigerians who believed that anywhere you are in the country is home as long as you are a Nigerian and as a result of the accident of his birth too because his mother is from the northern part of the country. As a matter of fact he spoke the three major indigenous languages fluently. He spoke Hausa, Igbo and Yoruba fluently. He believed everywhere is home and decided to settle down in Lagos and that was it. We went to him and made him realize that Lagos was not his home. That was when realized he needed to build a house here. But unfortunately, his health condition did not allow it.”

    As part of his plan to return home, the traditional ruler said Adekunle told him of his plan to establish a massive farm and possibly build a farmhouse on it where he would live.

    “I know about a particular landed property, a vast expanse of land that is up to two hundred or three hundred acres. He planned to come and establish a farm there. That is somewhere in Surulere Local Government. That one is still there. He was planning a farmhouse there where he could probably live while he is into integrated farming business, but all these plans died with him. All the dreams died with him!

    “He was planning a poultry and fish farm to the best of my knowledge. Those are the things he discussed with me. But with the size of the land, he could do more, probably crop farming because the land is over two hundred acres. So, it is enough for commercial farming.”

    The monarch posited that Adekunle was not well rewarded for his role in keeping Nigeria together as one nation. He said the late soldier went out of his way and staked his life for Nigeria but received nothing or very little in return.

    His words: “To the best of my knowledge he was not well recognized and rewarded. This was a man who, for the better part of his life, fought a war that his colleagues thought was difficult. He was sent to a terrain that was difficult for people to penetrate. With the little equipment we had then, he was able to fight for the unity of the country by forcing the Biafran soldiers to submit and surrender to the superiority of the Nigerian Soldiers. Though that one came after he had been redeployed from the 3rd Marine Commandos, the greater part of his job had been done. This was a man who never cared about his position. By virtue of his position he ought not to be at the warfront but he was the one leading them to that warfront, directing them. Adekunle never sat at the office. Instead, he followed them to the warfront. He was a brilliant soldier. So, we are talking about a person who did that for this country.

    “Not only that, in the 1970s he was appointed the chairman of the task force to decongest the Nigerian Ports. He did the job gallantly well. He was given a deadline and within a short period he delivered. He beat the deadline and when he succeeded in clearing the problem he was redeployed before his retirement. So, a man who sacrificed a better part of his life for the country did not really have something we can point at as his own. He did not have any company under his name he had no estates, no foreign account. There was no case where he was appointed director general of any parastatal despite his position in this country. So, he was not well treated, “Even the circumstances behind his retirement; you will discover that he was humiliated somehow. Someone who fought brilliantly for this country, he was not planning a coup and he was forcefully retired in 1974 as a general. Is that the best way to compensate someone who fought for the unity of the country?

    “It is not too late to honour him. We can give him posthumous recognition. It is better late than never. I am using this medium to appeal to the government to honour him posthumously.

    Nigeria today has different kinds of awards. We can honour him with a national award; we can name a monument after him and so on.”

    The monarch also called on the Federal Government to pick the bills of the late soldier’s burial. He also wants the government to build a house for him and do anything good that will help the younger and future generations to remember him.

    Reflecting on the nature of the deceased and his lifestyle, Oba Oyediran said: “Benjamin Adekunle’s lifetime was that of encouragement for youths, though he did not believe in influencing people to do anything. He stood by the principle of merit all through his life. If you met him that you wanted your child in the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA), he will tell you to allow the child read and pass the exam and the interview. The child must be able to gain admission based on his/her performance. I cannot say what informed that decision maybe it was because of the way he was forcefully retired. I do not know. He believed in merit and did not like to influence people into positions. So, if anyone wanted to join, he encouraged them but did not influence their placement.” He said.

    Also speaking a neighbour around Adekunle’s father’s house, Mrs Adedoja Oyelola recalled that: “He was a very responsible man. Benjamin Adekunle was really responsible. His family has a good name and he kept it. He was accommodating, nice to all of us. Whenever he came around, he used to relate well with everyone but he stopped coming home regularly when his brother died.”

    His sister in-law, Mrs Serifat Oyinkansola said: “He was a great fighter. He used to visit when his blood brother was alive. He was a good, responsible, accommodating man. He was good to the extended family members. He sometimes attended family meetings. We miss him because he made the family name popular. He brought fame to the family.”

  • ‘Ogbomoso ‘ll be better under APC’

    ‘Ogbomoso ‘ll be better under APC’

    Hon. Oyewole Oyewumi of the All Progressives Congress (APC) is a House of Representatives aspirant in Ogbomoso North, South and Orire Constituency, Oyo State. In this interview with Musa Odoshimokhe, he speaks about his ambition, the challenges facing his constituency and how he intents to tackle them.

    Why are you contesting for the House of Representatives?

    Let me say this is not my first time of representing the people. I had made myself available to serve my people at the local level in a number of occasions. I represented Apapa Ward in 1996 as a councilor and later became the Vice Chairman of Apapa Local Government, when it was upgraded to a council. I was elected under the zero party basis; I won the election in recognition of my personal quality. At a different time, I was appointed as a Supervisory Councilor for Works and later, for Health during Asiwaju Bola Tinubu’s tenure. I was also the state legal adviser for Alliance for Democracy (AD). The only new twist is that I have moved my political activism from Lagos to  Ogbomoso, where I think I can also serve my people better. I think all hands must be on deck; everybody that has something to contribute to resolve the challenges facing the country should play a role. As a politician, I believe I have something to contribute towards finding the solution, at the level of representation. That is why I chose to go for the Federal House of Representatives.

    What difference will you make to distinguish yourself from the person and the party currently representing the constituency?

    I have always belonged to the progressive, platform because it is known for its result, oriented politics. As for my party the All Progressives Congress (APC), it will make the change. I started with AD, then, the Action Congress (AC), which later became the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and now the APC. I have never for once been scared by our programme of action, which is pro-people. These are propounded on the ethos and doctrine of social democracy, welfarism and politics of inclusion. It has what I will call a national spread. I am happy the APC will have unfettered access to a wider section of the country to pursue these welfarist goals and agenda and to promote true democracy.

    Being a Lagos-based politician may affect your acceptance at home. How are you resolving this?

    The case of my politics in Lagos is like the case of a rural person that came to the city to see a colleague. My feet have always been firmly grounded in Ogbomoso town, not only in politics, but social affairs and every other thing. I went to secondary school in Ogbomoso. In fact, since my father returned to Ogbomoso in 1973 to become the Soun (traditional ruler) of Ogbomoso, the place has been more or less my home. I am familiar with the activities in my community. It will interest you to know that all the political offices I have held in Lagos are offices at the local government level. This automatically tells you that I am well at home with life at the grassroots. In a nutshell, I am very much a local boy in Ogbomoso.

    Hon. Mulikat Akande of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is currently occupying the  House of Representatives. With her pedigree, can you displace her?               

    I do not want to talk about the individual currently occupying the seat. Rather, I will rather talk about her platform. Let me put it this way: people occupying political offices under that platform are like tenants. Their time would soon be up and they would vacate their positions for the owners of the constituency, who are actually the Ogbomoso people. We know the circumstances under which the elections that brought them into power were held. I am happy to say that the truth has finally prevailed; the scales have fallen off the eyes of the people, and they would not allow anyone to intimidate them this time around through thuggery and the use of terror. People are now ready to protect their votes. We know where the peoples, vote will be. You will observe that, in the past, Oyo State was governed by the PDP. But, the party was swept off in the last general election by the APC. Ogbomoso North, South and Orire Federal Constituency, as well as Oyo North Senatorial Constituency, the two constituencies held by the PDP in Oyo State today, will return to the APC come 2015.

  • Baptists hold crusade

    Itesiwaju Baptist Association in Lagos East Baptist Conference of the Nigerian Baptist Convention will organise a four-day power-packed crusade from August 3 to 6.

    The crusade with the theme: “Times of Refreshing” (Acts 3:19), will hold at Arch. Bishop Aggrey Field (sports centre), Ilasamaja, Lagos from 5:30pm daily.

    The chief host, Rev. E.O. Ojo, the association moderator, said there would be salvation, healing, deliverance and signs and wonders, adding that the guest minister is Evangelist Job Alabi of the Covenant of Peace Evangelistic Association, Ogbomoso, Oyo State.

    A ministers’ conference will hold at Araba Baptist Church, Ilasamaja, Lagos on August 5 and 6 from 10am daily.

  • 13 lives lost on Oyo/Ogbomoso road in one week

    No fewer than 13 people have lost their lives along Oyo to Ogbomoso highway in the last one week, investigation by The Nation has revealed.

    Motorists and commuters plying the federal highway have, in the last few weeks,  had sad tales to tell as a result of their nightmarish experience while transiting from the South West zone of the country to the northern axis.

    Just recently at the Araromi junction behind St. Bernadines Girls Grammar School, Oyo, a student was reportedly crushed to death by a lorry, just as a manager of a filling station reportedly lost his life on a commercial motorcycle in front of Labamba Hotel.

    Also at Elekara Market, a north-bound lorry rammed into a trailer parked beside the road, killing five persons on the spot.

    Same day, another auto crash occurred opposite the Olivet High School where two persons died instantly, while three others sustained injuries.

    Also a few days ago, the driver of a red golf car allegedly ran into a parked taxi cab at the popular Owode area killing three persons in the process.

    Findings revealed that the major cause of these accidents is largely due to the deplorable condition of the road over many years.

    Within the Oyo axis of the highway, motorists suffer untold hardships as a greater portion of the road network is in bad shape, while the Ogbomoso axis is ridden with potholes and gullies.

    On this road, our correspondent counted over 100 potholes and deep gullies, while the breakdown of trailers and other heavy duty truck is also a common sight with these broken down vehicles left unattended to for many days.

     

  • Ajimobi orders reconstruction of bridge

    Ajimobi orders reconstruction of bridge

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has ordered the reconstruction of Isuwin Bridge in Atiba Local Government Area.

    The bridge, which runs across Isunwin River at Koso, is about to collapse.

    It is an alternative route to Oyo/Ogbomoso.

    Residents have turned the river into a dump site, obstructing its free flow.

    Koso and Oroki are always flooded whenever it rains and the river overflows.

    When the Local Government Caretaker Chairman Prince Adeniyi Adeyemi inspected the bridge yesterday, he said the governor had directed that the bridge’s reconstruction should begin immediately.

    Adeniyi said: “The Works Department has also been directed to embark on immediate dredging of the river and other spots threatened by erosion. We will enlighten residents on the danger of dumping refuse in the river.”

    He was accompanied by members of the Oyo Traditional Council (Oyo Mesi), led by the Basorun of Oyo, Chief Ayoola Layinka 1, and the local government’s Director of Works, Yussuf Abiona.

    Adeyemi thanked Ajimobi for responding promptly to the people’ plight, urging residents and road users to cooperate with the contractor when work begins on the bridge.

    Speaking for residents, Mr. Akinrogun Segun Taiwo thanked the governor and the Alaafin of Oyo for their concern.

    Adeyemi, who earlier inaugurated a bridge at Odo-Jide River, inspected some ongoing projects in the council.

    They include Oke-Olola Bridge, Oke-Olola/Oyagbe and Oke-Olola/Aladota roads.

     

  • Oyo votes N3.7b for six model schools

    Oyo votes N3.7b for six model schools

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has approved N3.7 billion for the conversion of six secondary schools into model schools.

    Commissioner for Education Prof. Solomon Olaniyonu said this would create conducive environment for teaching and learning.

    The schools are Anglican Secondary School, Orita-mefa, Ibadan; Baptist High School, Saki; Ogbomoso High School, Ogbomoso; Oba Akinbiyi High School, Ibadan; Obaseeku High School, Eruwa and Abiodun Atiba Grammar School, Oyo.

    Each of the project, which will cost N622 million, includes the building of 24 classrooms, administrative blocks, science laboratories, Intro-tech workshops, computer rooms and libraries.

    The governor has also approved N143 million for the renovation of primary healthcare centres across the state.

    The contract includes the purchase of equipment and drugs in the centres.

    Olaniyonu said N30 million was earmarked for the purchase of ambulances for general hospitals.

  • Vigilante group tackles police over release of suspected ritualist

    THE release of a middle-aged man who was recently arrested by members of a vigilante group for allegedly having carnal knowledge of a mad woman by the police is currently raising dust at Oke Anu area in Ogbomoso North Local Government Area of Oyo State.

    Investigation revealed that in the last couple of weeks, residents of Oke-Anu area have been keeping tabs on the man, who has been allegedly having sexual intercourse with lunatic women.

    The man is said to be happily married with grown-up children.

    Sources in the area revealed that nemesis eventually caught up with him when residents alerted a team of the vigilante group led by Tijani Yinusa, who arrested the man while allegedly involved in the act.

    The residents were said to have mobilised themselves with the aim of lynching the man, but the quick intervention of the men of the vigilante group who took him to Owode Divisional Police Station saved the day.

    It was, however, learnt that the alleged accused was later released by the police which allegedly accused the residents and the vigilante group for carrying out an illegal arrest.

    Efforts by The Nation to speak with the divisional police officer of the station were all to no avail, as his aides insisted he was not available for comment.

     

  • Petrol scarcity: Kwara warns against panic buying

    Petrol scarcity: Kwara warns against panic buying

    •Queues resurface in Iseyin

    The Kwara State government has called on residents to refrain from panic buying of petrol, following reports of scarcity of the product.

    Special Assistant to the Governor on Petroleum Monitoring Lawal Isiaka told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday that there was no reason for panic buying.

    “The vandalised pipeline on Ogbomosoroad, which supplies petroleum products to Ilorin, has been repaired.

    “So these marketers who closed their stations to create artificial scarcity because of bridging of fuel at Oke-Oyi depot will be disappointed.

    “l want to warn fuel marketers who sell the product above the official pump price to desist as anybody caught will face the wrath of the law,’’ he said.

    A NAN correspondent reports that residents besieged the few stations where the product was being sold.

    At Omu Aran, headquarters of Irepodun Local Government Area, no filling station was selling to consumers as at 3pm on Sunday.

    NAN investigation showed that most independent operators closed in Ilorin, while there were queues at the NNPC stations and outlets of major marketers, such as Mobil and Total.

    State Chairman of Independent Petroleum Marketers’ Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) Bashir Olopade attributed the situation to inadequate supply of the product to their members.

    “Can you believe that over 300 of our members in this state were being supplied with two trucks only on a daily basis?

    “There is scarcity because the independent marketers are not loading as expected; the loading is now a camouflage.

    “ What we do now is to go for bridging by approaching independent depots in Lagos,’’ he said.

    State Controller of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) Amos Jokodola said he was on leave and could not make any comment.

    In Iseyin, Oyo State, queues resurfaced in many filling stations following the scarcity.

    NAN reports that most filling stations closed while the few selling had queues.

    A NAN correspondent reports that filling stations owned by independent marketers at Koso, Bolamarck, Barracks and Oja-Agbe had queues.

    NAN also reports that only five of the 25 stations in the area were selling petrol.

    Some motorists said they had parked their vehicles in different stations since Sunday night to enable them buy fuel.

  • Once upon Oyo’s dry taps

    The Ipad generation of Nigerian youths may find it difficult conceiving of water beyond sachet/bottled water and boreholes, but time was in this country when the taps actually flowed. In many parts of the country, as late as the early 90s, very early in the morning – or as dusk came calling – a siege of pails and buckets usually surrounded the taps mounted in strategic places nearly on every street in town, and daily water needs were met amid lively chatter and theatrics.

    In the Pace Setter state, the last time anyone enjoyed such a luxury, as pipe-borne water would later sadly become, was in 1996. This is no surprise: both local and international observers agree that water and sanitation coverage rates in Nigeria are amongst the lowest in the world. On a national scale, access to an improved water source stagnated at 47 per cent from 1990 to 2006. It is no surprise then that conservative estimates cite access to adequate sanitation as decreasing from 39 per cent in 1990 to 35 per cent in 2010.

    With no functional water supply in Oyo State, life rapidly deteriorated in the state. Open defecation even in the daytime and in the full glare of the public was routine, and Ibadan, the state capital, became almost synonymous with filth and degradation, even when it retained its lead position as a centre of commerce and intellectualism. The Water Corporation of Oyo state, a public corporation carved out of the Western Nigeria Water Corporation in 1976, always had seven directorates and four units, with its headquarters at the Secretariat, Ibadan and district offices located at Agodi, Bodija, Egbeda, Jericho, Oke-Ado, Ogbomoso, Oyo and Saki.  It had a vision to ensure uninterrupted provision of potable water for the use of the people the state at reasonable charges, with clearly spelt out objectives of production and distribution of potable water for the use of human and agro-cultural purposes through construction, installation and operation of necessary water infrastructure on behalf of the Oyo State government. Among the other charges were, to control and manage all water works vested in the corporation; to establish, control, manage, extend and develop new schemes and to extend and develop existing ones as the corporation may deem necessary for the purpose of providing adequate water in order to meet the requirement of the general public, agriculture, trade and industry in various parts of Oyo State; to ensure that potable water is supplied to the consumer thereof at reasonable charges and in potable quality and adequate quantity and, finally, to organize the conduct of comprehensive research for the purpose corporation from time to time on matters relating to its function under law.

    But has it supplied water in the last 17 years?

    The first week of January 2014 came with great news for the people of Oyo State, as Senator Abiola Ajimobi, the state governor, commissioned the N262 million ultra-modern water treatment plant at the Asejire, ending the 17 years woe in the state and the neighbouring communities. With a production capacity of 186,000 cubic meters of water per day, the Asejire scheme is the largest water production scheme in the state, supplying potable water to 85 per cent of the entire populace in Ibadan metropolis, as well as the communities of Ikire, Ikoyi and Apomu in the neighbouring Osun State. The project, awarded just six months earlier by the state government as part of efforts towards increasing the volume of potable water supply to the people of Ibadan metropolis, saw eight out of the 10 pumps rehabilitated with 100 per cent efficiency, and critical water treatment units functioning well.

    When the Ajimobi admnistration came on board, the water treatment plants in the state were operating at a miserly eight per cent capacity utilisation due, as the governor himself admitted during the commissioning of the Asejire scheme, to “un-imaginable neglect by past administrations and the managerial deficiencies of erstwhile operators.”

    Water equipment was obsolete and decrepit, partly because spare parts for their maintenance were not available and supply was perpetually interrupted. And so following a needs analysis, Governor Ajimobi said, government awarded contracts for the construction of Ayete Water Supply Scheme, to supply water to Tapa, Idere and Ayete communities; dedicated a power line to Saki Water Supply Scheme and rehabilitated a dedicated power line to Ogbomoso water supply schemes.

    It also extended pipelines to new areas throughout the state, upgrading of water treatment facilities at Koso and Atori Waterworks in Iseyin. What is more, the comprehensive replacement and repair of all electro-mechanical components at all water supply schemes and booster stations in the state, upgrading and rehabilitation of Oyo Water Supply Scheme, rehabilitation and upgrading of Igboho Water Supply Scheme, expansion works on Igbetti and Ogbomoso Water Supply Scheme, revalidation of construction of Ilero Water Supply Scheme and laying of New Rising Mains from Eruwa to Igboora (Phase I & II) all fitted smoothly into the administration’s plan to provide potable water to the masses of the state, long traumatised by visionless politicians in khaki or agbada.  While eliminating the incidence of water-borne diseases, the plant can conveniently supply about 150 million litres of water to about four million residents of Ibadan and its environs on a daily basis.

    Now, the functioning water supply schemes in Oyo State are Asejire, Eleyele, Eruwa , Oyo, Iseyin, Saki, Kisi, Ogbomoso and Igbeti Waterworks. Specifically, the projects approved, completed, on-going or about to be awarded include the following: reclaiming of Eleyele Waterworks after the flood incidence of year 2011; rehabilitation and upgrading of Asejire Water treatment plants and purchase and installation of modern analytical equipment for the state Central Laboratory, Asejire. Others are the purchase of water treatment chemicals as and when due; payment for electricity used as and when due;  and relocation of pipes at Bodija Restoration Bridge, Mokola Fly-over Bridge, Eleyele/Dugbe Dualised Road, Efunsetan/Challenge Road, Iseyin Dualised Road and Ogbomoso Dualised Road; construction of Ayete/Tapa/Idere Water Supply Scheme; rehabilitation and expansion of Igbetti Water Supply Scheme; repair of filter beds and replacement of spent filter media at Oyo, Saki and Eruwa Water Supply Schemes;  and rehabilitation of dedicated power line at Ogbomoso Water Supply Scheme. There is also the construction of dedicated power line at Saki Water Supply Scheme; construction of dedicated power line to Eruwa Water Supply Scheme; purchase and installation of electro-mechanical components for all water supply schemes throughout the state; purchase and installation of New High and Low Lift Pumps and 500KVA Generator for Eruwa Water Supply Scheme; electro-mechanical rehabilitation of Igboho Water Scheme and laying of new rising mains from Eruwa Water Supply Scheme to Igboora township (Phase I & II).

    Others are bulk purchase of pipes and other repair materials; purchase and installation of 875/1000KVA generator for Agodi and Bodija booster stations respectively; upgrading of Koso and Atori Water Supply Schemes at Iseyin; extension of pipelines to new areas all over the state and construction of Ilero water supply schemes, and  the purchase of computer sets and other accessories, the state having  secured an African Development Bank loan for the urban water supply and sanitation for Ibadanland. There was also the purchase and Installation of gas plants for Asejire Water Supply Scheme and, of course, the construction of mini water supply schemes for other urban communities in the state.

    With the massive infrastructural development ongoing in the state, the restoration of pipe-borne water is a fitting tribute to the vision of a competent manager of men and materials determined to institute a new order, and restore Oyo State to the path of progress charted by the sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

     

    • Ismail lives in Ibadan, Oyo State.