The Western
Region was a subdivision of the Federation of Nigeria until 1967 and its
capital was at Ibadan. It was established in 1939 under British rule as a
subdivision of the Southern Nigeria colony. Upon independence of Nigeria in
1960, it became one of the members of the Federation, along with the Eastern
Region and the Northern Region. In 1963, two provinces: Benin and Delta were
split from the region to form the new Mid-Western Region.
In 1967 the
regions were abolished and the area was subdivided into Lagos and Western
states, which would also later be subdivided.
In 1956, when
the Queen Elizabeth, the 2nd of England came to Nigeria, perhaps her most
prominent colony in Africa, she visited the Eruwa Pineapple Plantation (now in
Oyo State). My grandfather (a shortened Biography below) was the Plantation Assistant
Manager then, under the Western Nigeria Development Corporation (WNDC).
The farm used
to supply the pineapple to the Lafia Canning factory in Ibadan, owned by WNDC,
at the time. The citrus canned by the Lafia factory was also supplied from the
Apoje Farm Settlement, near Ijebu Igbo (now in Ogun State)
According to my
older cousin, Adeniyi Babalola and my uncles, Mr Akinyemi Adebiyi and late
Babatunde Adebiyi, who were old enough then, and who used to stay with our
grandfather at Eruwa, (and other WNDC-owned farms across the Western and
Midwest Regions where my grandfather was usually transferred) the unique thing
about the Eruwa farm was that it had 2 large windmills and turbines, which were
used to generate electricity and run water for the settlements and for
irrigation throughout the farm settlement at Eruwa.
That was in
Western Nigeria in 1956 - Windmills to generate electricity!!!
The Eruwa farm
is now a cashew-nut plantation (and another 500 acre cashew nut farm near Iwo,
in Osun State and 200 acres of Cashewnut farm in Upper Ogun, near Iseyin, Oyo
State) which have been and are being badly managed by successive Oyo State
Governments, while the over 5500 hectares Apoje Oil Palm and Citrus Plantation,
was sold by the Gbenga Daniel administration of Ogun State to a private "investor"
for N30 million. That was in 2009 or so, but I don’t know the current state of
the farm as it stands with the Ogun State Government today; suffice it to say
that it is a sad state of affairs that over 5500 hectares of palm trees,
bananas and plantains, citrus fruits, fish ponds, clear rivers and streams will
be sold for such a parlous sum to a privileged “investor” (by the way, the
“investor” is now deceased)
For historical
purpose, I will quote Marklene Chinatu Ugbogu, “The grandiose objective
for the use of public-private partnerships involving foreign capitalists,
indigenous entrepreneurs and the government of the Western Nigeria was the
insatiable quest of the latter for development to create a society in which
‘life more abundant’ was realized. Corollary to that factor were the inadequacy
of managerial, technical and skilled African manpower vis a-vis the pool of
monetary reserves built by the rescinding colonial British administration from
overseas sale of cash crops. The government of the Western Region of Nigeria
set up the Western Nigeria Development Corporation (WNDC), which operated with
relatively extensive autonomy under the oversight of the Ministry of Trade and
Industry. Over fourteen partnerships were formed through a network of efforts
involving Ministry of Trade and Industry, the Ministry of Economic Planning,
Economic Missions, Industrial Promotion Commission and the WNDC”. (Abstract
from ‘Western Nigeria Development Board: Modified Colonial Agency for
Public-Private Partnerships’, Marklene Chinatu Ugbogu, Global Journal of Social
Sciences Vol 14, 2015: 67-74)
Along with my
several siblings, uncles and cousins, we used to spend our long summer holidays
with my maternal grandfather, mostly on the farms where he was working. The two
farms I vividly remember spending much time in are the Apoje Farm Settlement,
Ijebu Igbo, and the Aroromi Obu Palm and Rubber Plantations, now in Ondo State.
It was fun and learning in those days in Sixties.
I recollect in
Apoje, in the 60’s, when the farm was visited by several “oyinbos” and were
shown around the farm by my grandfather, who was the farm manager then, along
with his assistant, one Mr Jarret, a Sierra Leonian and other WNDC staff who
came from Ibadan, the Western Region capital. We, as children, were following
them around in tractors and trailers, enjoying ourselves, and to the huge oil
processing mill located on the farm. It wasn’t until several years later that I
realised those “oyinbos” were the Malaysians who came to learn the cultivation
of Oil palm from Nigeria (they also went to other farms, including the one in
Benin, NIFOR). Malaysia, of course, as we know, is now the undisputed largest
producer of palm oil in the world. At the time they came to learn and collect
in Nigeria, Nigeria was the undisputed largest producer of palm oil in the
world. Maybe at present, Nigeria has now crawled its way back to the 7th
largest, after not even reckoned with in the Eighties and Nineties.
In those days,
I could recollect at least 3 farm settlements in Apoje and several too, in
Araromi-Obu. Each settlement was self-sufficient. They had their own primary
schools, fully equipped health centres or Dispensaries, community halls,
churches and mosques, mini-supermarkets, and nearby markets. Entertainment is
provided in the form of mobile cinema and travelling musicians. The workers,
incidentally, were mostly from Calabar and what is now the Cross River and Akwa
Ibom States, and they were the best and expert in oil palm cultivation,
maintenance and harvesting. They, and/or their descendants, are still on the
Apoje farm till today. The huge Processing Mill was always at work with its
vast furnace and heavy machinery, heavy fumes and palm oil and palm kernel oil
smell in the air, with hundreds of tractors and trailers bringing in harvested
palm bunches to be crushed, extracted and processed, and then packed. For the
citrus, these were also harvested and sent straight to Lafia Canning factory in
Ibadan to be canned.
Araromi Obu had
two farms, the several hundred hectares of Rubber trees, and several hectares
of Oil Palm trees. We always wake up in the morning to see the workers
collecting the raw sap from the cup attached overnight to each rubber tree. The
rows are maintained from weed and tractors moving in between for the workers to
pour the collected saps and straight to the processing factories. I guess
Dunlop Tyres in Ikeja was where the processed sap will end up to be made into
vehicle tyres and other by-products. Araromi-Obu also had several
self-sustaining living settlements.
Where are we
now? In the pits and struggling to get out. While I have titled this as “A
Sorry Tale of the South West of Nigeria”, be mindful that this is just
one of hundreds of sorry tales and missed opportunities of that region that I
am just unqualified to go into.
However, there
seems to be a sudden surge of desire from the rulers and leaders of this
region, comprising of the six states of Lagos, Oyo, Ogun, Osun, Ondo and Ekiti
to reverse the descent into the abyss that had befallen us since 1966.
Organisations such as Dawn (Development Agenda for Western Nigeria) Commission
is on the move to harness all resources of the region together and work with a
seemingly revamped and re-focused Oodua Group (another very sad narration) and
set the region on the path of self-sufficiency, hope, progress and development
again.
I sincerely
want DAWN Commission, the Oodua Group and the Governments of the Western states
to succeed and hence wish ALL (both the Western part and the whole of Nigeria)
of us the best. We need it!
ANNEX: Brief
Biography of Chief Gilbert Aderibigbe Adebiyi (1907 – 1996)
v Born 27
September 1907.
v October
1925 - Left Ibadan Grammar School
v December
3, 1925 to March 3-1926 Nigeria Railway Traffic Training School. (worked at
Zaria, Gogwada Stations, Iddo, Tabu, Lalupon, Ebutte Metta, Wushishi, Olomu,
Ifo Junction, Jebba (1925 to 1931)
v June
1931- RETRENCHED due to World-Wide trade depression.
v
Sept 1933 to July 1951- joined Agric. Dept.1933,
and served at OWO Cocoa Division and then at the following: Oka Akoko; Cotton
market at Iwo; Cocoa Extension at Ake Agbe, Akoko; Cotton market at Moniya and
Fiditi; .Oshogbo Ginnery; School of Agriculture, More Plantation IBADAN, MAMU
SOUTH AREA; Extension worker at Ogbomoso; Tafo, Gold Coast (now Ghana) Cocoa
Diseases Survey Training Course (Classed as Best of the West African
Candidates.) that enhanced instantaneous elevation of grade level.
v 1st Aug
1951 to 31st March 1952-Seconded to Western Regional Production Development
Board (W.R.P.D.B.). UPPER OGUN, ISEYIN.
v April
1952 to 31st Oct 1957-Service under W.R.P.D.B. later changed to W.N.D.C.
(Western Nigeria Development Corporation). Served in various stations, West
& Midwest Nigeria: viz.
§ UPPER
OGUN ESTATE-1-6-51 to 20-4-53.
§ OSUN
VALLEY SCHEME 20-4-53 to 28-5-54.
§ APOJE
(I.F.P.) IJEBU FARM PROJECT. - 28-5-54 to 10-10-1956, 25-3-58 to 25-4-59 &
8-01-66 to 19-07-1966.
§ AKWOKWU-IGBO-3-5-59
to 30-8-59.
§ UBULUKU-30-8-59
to 01-04-1960.
§ ARAROMI
OIL PALM ESTATE- 30-6-60 to 22-01-61.
§ AGBOR
OFFICE- 13-2-61 to 16-10-61.
§ APOJE-
13-3-62 to 31-8-66.
§ ARAROMI/
LOMIRO OIL PALM- 4-01-64 to 8-01-66. Conferred with a Chieftaincy Title as
Bajulaiye of Araromi-Obu-1965.
§ ODA-AKURE
COCOA PLANTATION-19th July 1966 to 30th Sept 1967 when left on one month leave
preparatory to retirement at the age of 60
§ W.E.F.
01-11-1967. Retired as Principal Plantation Manager (WNDC)
v Death on
30th May 1996.

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