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Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe FNSE: Turning Women Empowerment from Slogan to Substance in Oredo

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Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe FNSE: Turning Women Empowerment from Slogan to Substance in Oredo....KINDLY READ THE FULL STORY HERE▶

Governance is often discussed in terms of policies and budgets, but its true impact is measured by how it reaches people—especially those who hold families and communities together every day. In Oredo Federal Constituency, that reality finds expression in moments like this: Hon. Engr. Esosa Iyawe FNSE  engaging directly with women, not with promises, but with practical support.

This was not symbolism. It was intervention.

In Oredo, women dominate the informal economy—market trading, food processing, petty commerce, and home-based enterprises that keep neighbourhoods alive. Recognising this, Esosa Iyawe’s empowerment approach has focused on direct support to women groups, including financial assistance, empowerment materials, and organised engagement with grassroots women leaders to strengthen their economic footing. The aim is simple but deliberate: help women scale what they already do, not trap them in dependency.

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What stands out is the method. Instead of distant announcements, the engagement happens face-to-face, in familiar local settings, where accountability is immediate and impact is visible. Women are not spoken about; they are spoken with. That distinction matters in a constituency like Oredo, where trust is built through presence, not press statements.

This particular engagement underscores a broader pattern in Esosa Iyawe’s representation: targeted empowerment tied to constituency realities. By focusing on women as economic drivers—especially traders and caregivers—he is reinforcing household stability and community resilience at the same time. In practical terms, empowering one woman often stabilises an entire family unit.

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For Oredo Federal Constituency, this approach reframes empowerment from a campaign buzzword into lived experience. It moves the conversation away from vague inclusivity toward measurable impact—women better equipped to trade, support their families, and contribute confidently to the local economy.

In the end, leadership is not proven by how loudly empowerment is declared, but by how clearly it is felt. And in Oredo, moments like this show a representation style rooted in action, access, and follow-through—where women are supported not to applaud governance, but to benefit from it.

Osigwe Omo-Ikirodah is the Principal and CEO of Bush Radio Academy.

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