Hope, at Last, in a Long-Forgotten Place: The Resurrection of Agadagba-Obon Hospital
For nearly a generation, the Agadagba-Obon General Hospital stood like a metaphor in concrete—half-built, quietly decaying, and abandoned to time. Fifteen years of promise turned to dust, and with each rain-soaked season, the people of Ese-Odo Local Government could only watch as their hope eroded like the walls of the structure itself.
That might finally change.
This week, Prince Biyi Poroye, Chairman of the Ondo State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (OSOPADEC), did something that felt almost surreal to residents: He promised that the long-forgotten hospital would not only be revived, but officially commissioned—within Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa’s first 100 days in office.
It wasn’t just political theater. Poroye arrived with a delegation: members of the OSOPADEC board, lawmakers from the Ondo State House of Assembly, and a pledge that echoed louder than past pronouncements. The hospital, he said, would be completed. Fully. Finally.




To the people of Ese-Odo, that statement wasn’t just policy. It was personal.
For years, they’d lived with the silence of broken promises. Expectant mothers had made treacherous journeys to distant towns for basic care. The sick had turned to prayer and home remedies when the nearest medical attention was many miles—and sometimes a boat ride—away. The unfinished hospital became a symbol of a region overlooked, not just by government, but by the state’s collective imagination.
Now, something is shifting.
The inspection tour also took Poroye and his team to the Igbotu Township Road, another half-finished artery linking Apoi communities to the wider Irele Local Government Area. That, too, Poroye said, is a top priority—no longer a line item buried in budgets but a real project in motion.
And at the palace of the Agadagba of Arogbo Kingdom, Pere Zacchaeus Egbunu, tradition met modern governance. Poroye didn’t just offer words—he asked for blessings. And he got them. The monarch, long a quiet observer of successive governments’ failures, responded with warmth and cautious optimism.
For Governor Aiyedatiwa, this is more than infrastructure. It’s a statement of intent. A bid to prove that the era of abandoned projects is over, that governance can finally meet the expectations it has raised—and dashed—for decades.
Of course, skepticism lingers. It always does. Hope here has been deferred for so long it hardened into cynicism. But in recent days, that cynicism has started to soften, just a little. Because now, people aren’t just hearing promises. They’re seeing action.
And in Ese-Odo, where even basic health care once felt like a dream deferred, that may be the beginning of something revolutionary: belief.





