Ogun ready to accommodate overflow from Lagos, says Abiodun

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Abiodun

The Governor of Ogun State, Dapo Abiodun, has said that the state is ready to absorb all the shock that its proximity to Lagos brings.

According to him, there are advantages and disadvantages of being an overflow to Lagos State, assuring that the state had laid a plan of actions and mechanisms that would ensure that “as people begin to migrate from Lagos to Ogun, to either live, work or play, the state is ready to give them quality education, quality health care, transportation, clean water, and clean power.” 

The Governor disclosed this in an interview on a British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) Radio programme, Focus on Africa.

This was contained in a statement issued by the Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Kunle Somorin, and made available to journalists in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital.

He said Abiodun lauded the decision of the United Kingdom Government to identify the state as one of the beneficiaries of Eighty Million Dollar Fund under the aegis of its Global Future Cities Prosperity Fund Programme.

The Governor said the inclusion of Ogun State in the scheme “is a testimony to the fact that the state is not just a Gateway state to Nigeria but the fact that the leadership of the State is poised to brace up to the challenges and turn all the push factors of the continent’s fifth-largest economy to pull factors that can stand the test of millennial development”.

The Global Future Cities Prosperity Fund Programme recently identified Ogun State as one of the nineteen cities in ten countries that would benefit from the prosperity fund set up by the UK government.

“Fortunately, the Global Future Cities Prosperity Fund Programme has rightly identified Abeokuta as one of the 19 cities in ten countries that will participate in the Global Prosperity Future Cities Programme.

“What does this speak to? It speaks to recognizing the fact that today Ogun State is called the Gateway state for a reason – because you cannot traverse between Lagos and the rest of Nigeria without going through Ogun State. Ogun State has now become an overflow to Lagos.

“We must be prepared for that overflow in all ramifications. So, as people begin to migrate from Lagos to Ogun, to either live, work and play, we must ensure that we provide for them quality education, quality transport and health care; we must provide clean water, clean power, clean environment and good physical development,” he said.

The Governor stated that the present administration in the state would give the state a facelift that would attract the kind of investment capable of turning the state into a city that could withstand modern development in terms of architecture and infrastructure.

Abiodun, who visited Kings Cross Station in London, said he was guided by the fact that 10 years made a difference.

“Ten years ago what it looked like and what it now looks like today and the idea was for me to have a look and feel of how a slum can now be regenerated into a new city where people can live, work, and play.

“So, everything we are doing in the state now is private sector driven. We’ve put in a lot of reforms to ensure that Ogun State is indeed ready to work the talk,” he said.