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Esosa Iyawe’s Oredo Record: When Representation Shows Up In Classrooms
Esosa Iyawe’s Oredo Record: When Representation Shows Up In Classrooms....KINDLY READ THE FULL STORY HERE▶
In Oredo Federal Constituency, governance is often judged by proximity. People ask simple questions: Where did it happen? Who benefited? Can we see it? These are not abstract standards; they are local ones. It is within this framework that Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe’s approach to representation can be examined.
Education has emerged as one of the clearest footprints of his time in office—not as a campaign theme, but as a sequence of interventions that touch real institutions and real students. Across public schools within Oredo, structured support for learning infrastructure has been prioritized, particularly in areas long affected by overcrowding and limited access to modern learning tools.
One verifiable example is the provision and activation of ICT facilities in selected public secondary schools within the constituency. These interventions did not stop at donation; they included functional computer systems, learning-ready environments, and coordination with school administrators to ensure usage rather than abandonment. Students who previously encountered computers only in theory were introduced to practical digital learning—an intervention that teachers and principals can independently confirm.
This focus aligns with the constituency’s urban reality. Oredo is not short of intelligence; it is often short of access. By targeting schools rather than individuals alone, the intervention scales beyond symbolism. Each equipped classroom becomes a shared asset, used year after year, class after class.
As one local saying goes:
“If road good, everybody fit pass am.”
Beyond infrastructure, educational empowerment under Iyawe’s watch has followed a professional logic. As a trained engineer, his engagement reflects systems thinking—build once, build right, and ensure continuity. Projects are tied to institutions, not personalities, making them traceable long after announcements fade.
Community leaders and school authorities remain central to verification. These projects sit in public spaces, not private hands. Parents can walk into schools. Teachers can point to usage. Students can show skills gained. This transparency is part of what separates gestures from governance.
Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe’s record in this regard is not hidden. It is seated in classrooms, reflected in institutional upgrades, and visible through beneficiaries who do not need persuasion to testify—only opportunity.
That is the difference between presence and performance.
Osigwe Omo-Ikirodah is the Principal and CEO of Bush Radio Academy.
