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The Power Shift: How Abideen Tokunbo Adeaga Is Proving That the Strongest Governance Begins with the People

By Oyo Amebo

 

 

 



 

There is a question that quietly challenges every system of authority: who truly shapes the future, those who govern, or those who live with the consequences of governance? In Oyo State, that question has found an unexpected and compelling answer.

Honourable Abideen Tokunbo Adeaga has inverted the traditional script of leadership. Instead of policies descending from offices and committees, he has allowed ideas, priorities, and responsibility to rise organically from streets, villages, and community halls. Governance, under his watch, has ceased to be an abstract exercise. It has become a living conversation.

This is not leadership obsessed with directives or declarations. It is leadership that begins with listening and matures into trust. Adeaga has advanced a philosophy in which citizens are not spectators waiting for government intervention, but co-authors of their own development story. The result is a shift from governance as a transaction to governance as a shared mission.

Across Oyo’s towns, villages, and peri-urban settlements, participation has replaced passivity. Elders deliberate, women organise, youths innovate, and local leaders collaborate, not as an afterthought, but as the nucleus of decision-making.

Communities now define their needs, propose solutions, and take ownership of outcomes. This is a model that listens before it acts, and acts with an eye on longevity.

By the end of 2025, this approach had translated into over 250 community-driven micro-projects, directly impacting more than 350,000 people. Solar-powered boreholes now serve communities long denied clean water.

Classrooms once unfit for learning have been transformed into safe, functional spaces. Healthcare centres have emerged not through guesswork, but through precise alignment with local realities. These are not acts of benevolence; they are demonstrations of what happens when empowerment replaces paternalism.

What distinguishes Adeaga’s framework is its insistence on sustainability. Communities do not merely receive projects; they invest in them. Land is provided locally. Labour is shared.

Oversight committees monitor progress and maintenance. Development, in this model, does not end with commissioning ceremonies. It embeds itself into daily community life, protected and preserved by those it serves.

Inclusion, too, is foundational rather than symbolic. Widows are supported to build enduring livelihoods. Orphans are integrated through mentorship and communal care.

Persons with disabilities are not marginalised, but actively involved in shaping decisions. Women and young people emerge not simply as beneficiaries, but as leaders, strengthening civic trust and ensuring development rests on broad social consensus.

Among the most defining interventions under Adeaga’s stewardship is the Nigeria Community Action for Resilience and Economic Stimulus programme, implemented in collaboration with the World Bank and the Federal Government.

Through this initiative, more than 10,000 vulnerable citizens received food and cash support. Beyond immediate relief, the programme affirmed a deeper principle: that the most marginalised are not peripheral to Oyo’s future, but central to it.

At the Alegongo Community Hall in Lagelu, Adeaga’s engagement with beneficiaries was marked not by grand speeches, but by clarity of purpose. He spoke of responsibility as much as achievement, reminding communities that preserving progress is as vital as initiating it. It was a call to continuity, accountability, and shared pride.

This participatory culture now stretches across Ibadan, Oke-Ogun, Oyo, Ibarapa, and Ogbomoso. The evidence is unmistakable. Clean water systems, revitalised markets, functional schools, and resilient healthcare facilities stand as tangible proof that development endures longest when it is co-created, inclusive, and grounded in lived realities.

As Oyo State steps into 2026, the contours of a new governance blueprint are firmly drawn. Progress is no longer episodic or personality-driven. It is structured, inclusive, and designed to last. Under Adeaga’s leadership, the measure of authority is not how loudly it speaks, but how effectively it amplifies the voices of the people.

In this evolving paradigm, leadership is redefined. It is not about occupying the centre of attention, but about placing communities at the centre of action. Oyo State has learned a quiet but powerful lesson: when citizens are trusted to participate and leaders are disciplined enough to listen, development does not trickle down. It rises, steadily, collectively, and for everyone.

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