By Oyo Amebo

When Hon. Seun Olufade assumed leadership of Ibadan North Local Government, the council held its breath. In a space long defined by political visibility and constant scrutiny, residents knew that words alone would carry little weight.


Expectations were cautious, tempered by years of unfulfilled promises. Yet soon, the atmosphere began to shift.


Roads that had long borne the scars of neglect began to take on a new life. Commuters moved with ease where delays had once been inevitable.

Marketplaces, once chaotic and congested, opened into orderly, modern trading spaces where traders conducted their business with renewed confidence.



Bodija International Market, the heartbeat of commerce in the area, regained its role as a centre of opportunity, drawing shoppers and vendors alike into a rhythm that felt familiar yet revitalised.
Transport hubs followed a similar transformation. Motor parks emerged with structure and purpose, bringing order to a system that had once been unpredictable and congested.
Passengers now navigated designated spaces for boarding and parking, and the city moved with a clarity it had not known for years.
Beyond the bustle of commerce and mobility, classrooms began to tell their own story. Schools once marked by dilapidation and decay were rebuilt, extended, and equipped, providing young learners with environments that invited curiosity and engagement.
Educational materials reached pupils who had previously struggled to access basic resources, breathing new life into lessons and study halls.
Water, one of the most essential yet historically unreliable services, became more dependable.
Across the twelve wards of Ibadan North, residents found relief as new water facilities replaced the old scarcity, easing daily burdens and allowing families to focus on livelihood and learning rather than survival.
The visible presence of development gradually reshaped perceptions.
Where scepticism had lingered, acknowledgment grew. Communities began to refer to Olufade as “Mr Projects,” a nickname earned not through campaign slogans but through tangible interventions dotting the urban landscape.
Roads, markets, schools, and water systems became silent ambassadors of his leadership, each structure a testament to action rather than promise.
In Ibadan North, governance is no longer measured by speeches or ceremonies. It is measured in movement, in trade, in classrooms alive with learning, and in households freed from the daily struggle for water.
Seun Olufade’s tenure has left an imprint that residents can feel with every step, every transaction, and every drop from the tap. In a council long accustomed to political noise, the quiet authority of results has become its own kind of resonance.
Leadership, after all, is ultimately defined by what remains when words fade, and in Ibadan North, the traces of Olufade’s administration stand resilient, practical, and unmistakably real.

