Ilorin: A city in metamorphosis By Tunde Olusunle

Date: 2023-09-07

FROM across my various addresses over the years, the road has always been my preferred means of transport to Ilorin the Kwara State capital. At various times, I have lived in Lagos, Lokoja and Abuja and land transportation has always been my favourite. The therapeutic bliss and soothing breeze of the countryside is incomparable. There is the opportunity to make stops on the road to procure farm fresh produce and to support the local economy. You also get to “stretch your legs” as we say in local parlance and shake off cramps and aches.

My departed friend Onukaba Adinoyi-Ojo got us to stop in Abaji, Chikara and Koton Karfe in the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, and Kogi State on our various travels together. The instinctual anthropologist in him was interrogating the variants of Ebira language, his mother tongue, spoken in those parts, relative to the linguistic prototype in use in Okene the sociocultural spring of Ebiraland in Kogi Central. Road travellers are also privileged to stop by in identified watering holes on the highways to assuage the anger of growling bellies and thirsty throats.

Not anymore these days, however. Not with the deathly, large-scale dilapidation and wholesale depreciation of our roads, the subsisting spectre of several Nigerian highways. This is in spite of the staggering sums serially appropriated by government for their construction and maintenance. Not with the free reign of hooded hoodlums, of armed and brazen man-stealers, of random ransom-seekers, relentlessly parading the routes, endlessly patrolling our roads. Not with trigger-happy state-owned guards who dispossess commuters of their wallets and pockets, issuing them threats of mortal liquidation should they stall or dissent. It’s a totally different Nigeria we live in today within the short window of just a few preceding years of relative sanity and security.

I had cogent reason to be in the city recently after several years of unintended abstention. As we drove out of the airport with my good friend, Segun Sobogun, certain mutations in the prostate mass of the city were already noticeable. Ilorin is not pretending to be the more aesthetically savvy Lagos or Ibadan or Abeokuta. Gradually though, Ilorin’s acclaimed rusticity and ultra-conservatism are yielding to some makeover albeit salutary. Facing the airport directly for instance is a new shopping plaza ostensibly inspired by growing activity around the airport. The hitherto moribund facility was reawakened under the regime of Bukola Saraki as governor of Kwara State between 2003 and 2011. It was sustained by the regime of his successor Abdulfatah Ahmed and remains operational. At the last check, about half a dozen airlines ply the Ilorin route mainly from Abuja and Lagos. “Overland Airways” pioneered the trend before “Arik Air,” “Air Peace” and more recently “Green Air” joined the league.

You are greeted by fluttering banners advertising the tourist attractions in Kwara State dangling from the said commercial complex facing the airfield as you head for the city. Since the return to democratic governance, successive regimes in the state have marketed landmarks and monuments to visitors and adventurers. The Owu waterfalls, the Esie earthen figures, the Gaani festival, and Takai dance of the Baruten people, the Sobi hills are some of the voyeur’s delights in the plural-ethnic, multilingual state. Similar advertisements are emblazoned in select locations around the metropolis underscoring the centrality of tourism to the lifeblood of the state. At the intersection of Garin Alimi and Asa Dam is an underpass which is celebrated as the first “tunnel” in the city.

It was built by the Ahmed government to ease traffic. Commuting straight ahead beneath the underpass takes you into the very heart of Ilorin. The Asa dam road to your right on the other hand hosts the industrial zone of the city. The southward descent of this erstwhile boisterous manufacturing district is better told by the closure of some of the industrial plants and the acquisition of some by new owners. Dangote Flour Mills has been procured by Olam Grains, while Global Soap formerly owned by the multimillionaire industrialist, Samuel Adedoyin, has been possessed by Sanoma Industries. Kamwire Steel Products has also sprouted in the axis. The same road takes you all the way to the Offa garage, Ero-Omo and Olunlade sections of Ilorin.

The Garin Alimi route into Ilorin leads through the Ogbomosho-Oyo-Ibadan-Lagos road, locally referred to as Sawmill Road. It takes you into what can be classified as the “business hub” of Ilorin. To the left of the roundabout at Queens College is the way to Emir’s road onwards to Surulere, Baboko, Agaka districts, and thenceforth to the Emir’s palace in city centre. Straight ahead from the Queens College intersection is Taiwo Road, one of the longest roads in Ilorin. Residents prefer to bifurcate the road as Taiwo Oke and Taiwo Isale respectively, implying the “upper and lower” subdivisions of the road.

It was christened after Ibrahim Taiwo an army Colonel and military governor of the state who was assassinated in the abortive February 13, 1976 military coup which also claimed Murtala Ramat Mohammed a General who was Nigeria’s Head of State at the time. Taiwo and Emir’s roads, and the adjoining Agaka and Ita Amodu constitute the epicentre of commercial activities in Ilorin. Murtala Mohammed Way which today spots a flyover built by Saraki in front of the General Post Office, is an abutment to this burgeoning commercial cadastral. Offices, banks, boutiques, malls, shops, showrooms, stalls, eateries, hangouts, advertise themselves in healthy contest from their eye-catching buildings.

For several decades, the state-owned “Kwara Hotel” had in its pockets, the virtual monopoly of the hospitality sector in the city. Purpose-built by the administration of Ibrahim Taiwo’s predecessor David Bamigboye in 1971, and an architectural marvel in its own time, the over 200-room complex was a multifunctional resource. To be sure, Kwara Hotel was the first facility in the whole of today’s North Central Nigeria to be served by elevators. It used to be a one-stop-shop for boarding, conferences, sports, entertainment, nightclubbing and even bureau de change services. Years of mismanagement climaxed with its closure by the incumbent government led by Abdulrahman Abdulrasaq.

A potential vacuum in the all-important sector has been promptly mitigated by the organic emergence of new brands. “Noktel,” “E-Phoenix,” “Millennium,” “Peace,” “Whitefield,” “Princess,” “G-Pinnacle,” “Bovina,” “Rotana,” “Fresh,” “Monarchs,” “Harmony,” “Royalton,” “Savannah,” “Henry George,” “Golden Sands” and “Abila” are some of the more recent hotels and motels providing services to patrons. They are interspersed in various districts in Ilorin most dominantly in the Government Reserved Area, GRA, as well as adjoining sections of the city. There is an outlet of the renowned marketing brand Shoprite on Fate Road contiguous to the GRA which ministers to the needs of the middle class and to shoppers in general.

The more popular street-side bukaterias and bars have been augmented by more formal, more corporate entertainment and relaxation initiatives. Eateries like “Chicken Republic,” “Item 7,” “Kilimanjaro,” “Charcoal,” “The Place,” “Captain Cook”, “Aroma,” “T & K,” Iya Yusuf, Yakoyo, Amala Place and Aduke Alamala have spawned outlets across the face of good old Ilorin. Before now some of these labels were only obtainable in bigger cities like Lagos, Ibadan, Port Harcourt and Enugu. Hangouts like “Forest,” “Waterview,” “Our Garden,” “Sydney,” “House 13,” “Twizt,” “Obodo”, “Hy-Shoo”, among others spice up the new Ilorin. Events centres in Ilorin include “Atlantic,” “Acra,” “Excellence,” “Savannah” and “Succouth Valley.” Ahmadu Bello Way which hosts the seat of government has witnessed some remarkable changes over the years. A new office building for the deputy governor today sits adjacent the primordial Government House. There is also a new banquet hall and an upcoming centre for arts and culture.

There is now an annex to the State Secretariat from the “Challenge Bookshop” approach into Ahmadu Bello Way, while a novel international conference centre is also in the works.

*Dr. Olusunle, poet, journalist, scholar and author is a Member of the Nigerian Guild of Editors, NGE.

Source

 


Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Muideen Olaniyi Alalade     Damilola Yusuf Adelodun     Unilorin FM     Oba Abdulkadir La\'aro     Bayo Ojo     Funmilayo Mohammed     Olokoba     Minimum Wage     Emmanuel Olatunji Adesoye     Chief Imam Of Ilorin     COVID-19 Palliatives     Isiaka Yusuf     Lawyers Unite Against Corruption     Ubandawaki     Ganmo Electricity Sub-Station     Sa\'adu Salahu     Oba Abu     Abubakar Aliagan     Femi Ogunsola     Basic Education Certificate Examination     Kaosarah Adeyi     Samuel Elizabeth Keatswa     Gamji Members Association     Atiku     Hausa     Toyin Falola     Taibat Ayinke Ahmed     Marafan Shonga     Kwara State Infrastructure Development Fund     Solomon Edojah     A.O. Belgore     Mahmud Ayinla Giwa     Harafat E. Mukadam     Abdulsalam Firdaous Amosa     Mogaji Aare     IDPU     Ibrahim Kayode Adeyemi     College Of Education     Magaji Nda     Dunmade     Suleiman Mora Omar     Garba Ayodele Wahab     Garment Factory     Wahab Agbaje     Ogidi-Oloje     Yunus Lawal     Kemi Adeosun     Kolawole Bashirat     Jaigbade Alao     Aso Ofi     Academic Staff Union Of Universities     Abatemi-Usman     Mumini Ishola Hanafi     Muftau Akanbi Oke     Abdulganiyu AbdulAzeez     Kazeem Gbolagade     Earlyon Technologies     Igbomina     Abdulwasiu Bolaji Adeyi     Air Peace     Emir Of Shonga     Babaloja-General     Sobi FM     Toyin Saraki     2023 Elections     Babaita     Sheikh Hamzat Yusuf Ariyibi     CACOVID Palliatives     Cornelius Adebayo     Ahman Pategi University     Yusuf Abubakar     Lasiele Alabi Yahaya     Royal FM     Prince Bola Ajibola     Tinubu Legacy Forum     Hassanat Bello     United Nigeria Congress Party    

Cloud Tag: What's trending

Click on a word/phrase to read more about it.

Oloje     Bello Bature     Isiaka AbdulRazaq     Damilola Yusuf     Towoju     Titus Ashaolu     Centre For Digital Economy     Sadiq Buhari     Saad Omo\'ya     Afolayan     TIIDELab     Gbugbu     Emmanuel Bello     Ibrahim Abiodun     Tunji Ajanaku     Funmilayo Mohammed     KWASEIC     Bukola Saraki     Eghe Igbinehi     Press Release     Government House     Toyin Saraki     Christopher Ayeni     Lanre Jimoh     Niguel Gallando Marcias     Aro Yahaya     Oko-Olowo     Folorunsho Alao     Salman Alada     Zaratu Umar     Hydroelectric Power Producing Areas Development Commission     Oluwarotimi Boluwatife Adenike     Ahmad Lawan     Abdulkadir Remi Hawawu     Ajike People Support Centre     Abdulrauf Aliyu     Simon Sayomi     Geri-Alimi Split Diamond Interchange     Abubakar Ndakene     Abdulganiyu AbdulAzeez     Nigeria Governors\' Forum     Isaac Aderemi Kolawole     Abraysports FC     Bayer Nigeria Limited     ARMTI     Madawaki Of Ilorin     Mutawali Of Ilorin     Abdullahi Imam Abdullahi     Tope Daramola     Muhammed Akanbi     Akom Construction And Engineering Synergy Ltd     Aisha Ahman-Pategi     Salary     Aliyu Kora Sabi     Biliaminu Aliu     United Nigeria Congress Party     Olawuyi     Mopelola Abdulmaliq-Bashir     Abdulmumini AbdulRazaq     Wahab Femi Agbaje     KWTV     Simeon Ajibola     Oko     Oke-Kura     Trader Moni     Ojuekun     Abegunde Goke     Musibau Akanji     Maigida Soludero Transit     Ayodele Shittu     Kuliyan Geri     Matthew Okedare     Suraj Tunji Oyewale     Yahaya Seriki     Apaola     AbdulHakeem Ajibola Akanbi     Kwara Teaching Service Commission