By Oyo Amebo


As the new year begins, Lagelu carries a confidence it has not always known. The quiet determination of 2025 has become a foundation for 2026 , a year in which Honourable Mudashiru Kamorudeen intends to convert reform into enduring impact, and intention into lived experience for every community under his care.


The past year demonstrated that leadership at the grassroots is not measured by announcements, ceremonies, or fleeting visibility, but by the steady, cumulative improvement of everyday life.


Roads that once isolated villages are now arteries of connection, carrying not just vehicles but commerce, education, and human dignity.


Schools, clinics, and markets are no longer abstract concepts of development; they are functioning instruments of opportunity, maintained and utilised by the very people they serve.


Kamorudeen’s resolve for the new year is to deeply embed this philosophy across every facet of governance. Infrastructure, education, health, and security are to be approached not as isolated sectors, but as interconnected systems that reinforce one another.



Where progress in 2025 was measured by immediate relief, smoother travel, functional classrooms, responsive clinics — 2026 will be about scalability, sustainability, and replicability.

Rural routes will continue to be prioritised, with targeted interventions extending beyond initial rehabilitation to routine maintenance and community oversight.
This approach ensures that mobility is not episodic, but permanent and predictable, allowing farmers, traders, and families to plan, produce, and thrive without disruption.
Education, too, is set for renewal.
Schools will see structured upgrades that prioritise learning outcomes over appearances. Classrooms will be equipped for functionality, teachers supported with resources and training, and pupils immersed in environments that signal serious investment in their potential.
The coming year promises a continued shift from ceremonial refurbishments to educational empowerment that endures long after the ribbon-cutting photos fade.
Healthcare, another cornerstone of Kamorudeen’s resolve, will move from patchwork provision to community-centred reliability. Clinics will be staffed, stocked, and monitored consistently.
Preventive and primary care services will expand, ensuring that families in remote settlements can depend on accessible and responsive care without repeated intervention.
Security, long a concern in rural contexts, will remain structured and visible.
The Amotekun Corps will not only maintain presence but enhance community engagement and preventative measures, fostering an environment where safety is experienced daily, not only in response to incidents. In this way, governance becomes a continuous safeguard, not a reactionary gesture.
What distinguishes Kamorudeen’s vision for the new year is the deliberate fusion of strategy and empathy. Every decision is intended to reinforce the principle that progress must touch lives directly, be measurable by lived experience, and be sustainable without constant supervision.
Governance at the grassroots, in this framing, becomes an act of persistent attention, of steering communities toward autonomy, confidence, and dignity.
By anchoring 2026 in purpose, Kamorudeen seeks to ensure that Lagelu no longer waits for change from elsewhere. The town’s conversations, its expectations, and its daily rhythms will now be shaped by steady motion, accountable leadership, and tangible results.
Roads will continue to move people; schools will continue to cultivate knowledge; clinics will continue to provide care; and security will continue to reassure.
In essence, the new-year resolve is simple yet profound: to convert momentum into permanence, and promise into lived reality.
Lagelu’s transformation is not a spectacle, but a disciplined choreography of governance that unfolds every day, proving that leadership at the grassroots is measured not by rhetoric, but by motion, consistency, and the quiet accumulation of meaningful change.

