Lagelu Ushers in a New Era: The Engr. Seyi Makinde Legislative Building and a Vision Realised
By Oyo Amebo
Lagelu Local Government has stepped into a new era defined by purposeful leadership and tangible progress. Under Honourable Mudashiru Kamorudeen, governance has moved beyond promises to deliver real transformation.

Amid these sweeping changes, the newly reconstructed Engr. Seyi Makinde Legislative Building at Iyana-Offa emerges as a landmark of progress. On January 28th, it will be officially commissioned, marking the first major initiative of 2026.
The building is designed to house councilors and serve as the operational heart of local legislation. It is more than a physical structure; it is a symbol of a leadership that delivers, a hub where decisions shaping the lives of thousands will be made with transparency, collaboration, and foresight.

Roads now connect previously isolated communities, markets buzz with renewed activity, schools are resourced and functional, clinics operate reliably, and security has been strengthened to create safer, thriving neighbourhoods. This is governance that is felt, measurable, and consistent, a leadership that prioritises impact over fanfare.
Under Kamorudeen’s stewardship, Lagelu has witnessed a transformation that is holistic rather than piecemeal. Roads that once cut villages off from opportunity now pulse with movement, linking farmers to markets, students to schools, and families to healthcare centres. Every stretch of tarmac tells a story of access restored, commerce invigorated, and hope renewed.
Markets have become engines of prosperity, not only facilitating trade but signalling a growing confidence in governance that is steady and dependable.
Clinics, once places of uncertainty, now provide consistent healthcare, fully equipped, staffed, and maintained to serve communities day in, day out. Security is no longer reactive; the Amotekun Corps engages proactively, ensuring residents feel safe to live, work, and thrive.
Education, however, remains the most profound focus of Kamorudeen’s leadership. Through initiatives such as LAGELU EDU-SUPPORT and the Free JAMB Forms programme, young people now have pathways to realise their potential.
Classrooms have been transformed from symbolic spaces into incubators of ambition, stocked with modern resources and led by trained teachers. For Lagelu’s youth, education has become a bridge to achievement and self-actualisation.
What sets this era apart is Kamorudeen’s deliberate integration of strategy and empathy. Infrastructure, healthcare, education, security, and governance are treated not as isolated projects but as interconnected components of a living, thriving ecosystem.
Roads enable markets; markets fund households; households invest in schools; and schools prepare the leaders of tomorrow. The Legislative Building, in this context, is both a practical and symbolic fulcrum—a place where the machinery of governance operates efficiently to multiply impact across all sectors.
Every intervention under his leadership is a domino, tipping seamlessly into the next, building enduring momentum. Kamorudeen does not govern for applause or temporary visibility; he governs for permanence and meaningful change.
Citizens of Lagelu are discovering that governance, when executed with discipline, foresight, and empathy, can become a force for dignity, progress, and opportunity.
The inauguration of the Engr. Seyi Makinde Legislative Building will mark more than the opening of a facility; it will herald a new chapter in Lagelu’s development.
It is a statement that leadership can be measured not by speeches, slogans, or visibility, but by tangible transformation, enduring infrastructure, and empowerment of communities.
In Lagelu, the effects of this leadership are visible and deeply felt. Young people have access to education and resources that turn aspirations into achievable goals.
Families enjoy reliable healthcare and a secure environment. Markets thrive, roads connect, and decision-making is now anchored in a facility that reflects the ambitions of a community and the vision of its leaders.
Mudashiru Kamorudeen’s stewardship poses a challenge to the wider political class: can leadership be defined not by announcements or ceremonies, but by consistent, impactful service? In Lagelu, the answer is clear.
Governance delivered with purpose, precision, and empathy reshapes communities, and symbols like the Engr. Seyi Makinde Legislative Building stand as enduring proof that a new era of leadership has arrived.