Ogun Govt Targets 2,000km Road Construction Before End Of Abiodun’s Tenure
Ogun State government plans to construct o 2,000 kilometres of roads before the end of Governor Dapo Abiodun’s tenure.
The commissioner for Works, Ade Akinsanya, revealed this during an appearance on Sunrise Daily, explaining that road construction is ongoing in all the 20 local government areas of the state.
Akinsanya said the administration inherited over 4,000 kilometres of bad roads and deliberately set out to tackle the challenge through a statewide infrastructure strategy focused on rural connectivity, food security corridors, economic hubs and access to schools.
“We are talking about thousands of kilometres of bad roads, and as of today, we have completed more than 1,600 kilometres across the state,” he said. “We are not concentrating on one area alone — work is ongoing in all 20 local governments.”
He highlighted major projects, including the reconstruction of the 70-kilometre Ota–Abeokuta road, as well as extensive works in Ado-Odo/Ota, Ifo and Akute areas.
Akinsanya noted that previously impassable roads such as Ajuwon–Akute, Alhaji Kosoko–Akute and Yakoyo–Alagbole have now been fully rehabilitated, significantly improving movement between Ogun and neighbouring Lagos communities.
The commissioner added that construction is progressing steadily from Ota through Akute to Ijoko, with several sections already completed and others actively under development.
Also speaking on the programme, the Special Adviser to the Governor on Media and Strategy, Kayode Akinmade, defended the administration’s infrastructure drive, stressing that road projects are being evenly distributed across the state.
“When the governor assumed office in 2019, he promised to democratise infrastructure across all local governments, and that is exactly what is happening,” Akinmade said. “The 16 kilometres being referenced in one axis is just a fraction of the roads delivered statewide.”
He added that several roads have recently been commissioned in Abeokuta and other towns, noting that infrastructure development remains a central focus of the administration despite population pressure arising from Ogun State’s proximity to Lagos.
Akinmade urged critics to acknowledge the broader scope of ongoing projects, describing claims that little or nothing has been achieved as unfair and misleading.
