The Proposed Ogun, Lagos Joint Development Commission, Pitfalls to Avoid
Prince Dapo Abiodun, the Ogun state Governor-elect, held a
strategic meeting with the state chapter of the Manufacturers Association of
Nigeria (MAN) and other members of the Organised Private Sector at the factory
of the Flour Mills in Agbara, Ado-Odo-Otta local government of the state on
Friday 12 April, 2019. That day, he revealed that his administration and that
of his counterpart in Lagos state, Babajide Sanwo – Olu, had plans to establish
a “Joint Development Commission” to drive the Internally Generated Revenue
(IGR) of both states.
Residents of the communities on the borders of the two
states (Magboro, Akute, Olambe, Matogun, Ope Ilu, Ota, Sango, Agbara, Arepo,
Mowe, Ibafo, Ofada and others) received the promise with eclat. They set the
social media aglow with optimism. Thank God it was a Friday. That revelation
culminated in the puff of cigarette smokes, squadrons of pepper soup and
bottles of beer at different watering holes in those communities. They had
every reason to be happy. The two governors that followed each other, Gbenga Daniel
and Ibukunle Amosun, did not touch the areas in terms of development. The
roads, especially, looked as if some dragons from the pit of hell chewed them
into pieces. Thus, the communities remained terra incognita till today.
The only trouble, however, is that Abiodun’s revelation,
after the beer cleared from the brains of those who had travelled to cloud
nine, gave rise to a sense of deja vu, because, it happened during the tenure
of Otunba Gbenga Daniel of Ogun State and Bola Tinubu (and later Babatunde Raji
Fasola) of Lagos. That time, the body, called Lagos Mega-City Development
Authority, was headed by the great geographer, Professor Akin Mabogunje,
fizzled into oblivion with the speed of its arrival.
By Ademola Adegbamigbe
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