Skip to main content

Ondo Government Says Abandoned Oil Well Is Not In Ogun Territory, Seeks Naval Protection For Facility

Ondo Government Says Abandoned Oil Well Is Not In Ogun Territory, Seeks Naval Protection For Facility
February 8, 2025

Allen Sowore, the Senior Special Assistant to Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa, on Strategic Communication, in a release on Saturday asked the Nigerian Navy and other security agencies to ensure maximum protection of the asset. 

 

The Ondo State government has said the Oke-Agor-Isekun, an island where an abandoned oil well was discovered, is not in the Ogun State territory. 

Allen Sowore, the Senior Special Assistant to Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa, on Strategic Communication, in a release on Saturday asked the Nigerian Navy and other security agencies to ensure maximum protection of the asset. 

He said, "It is important to clarify that Ogun and Ondo are two distinct states in the South West, with well-defined boundaries. These states have enjoyed a long-standing, cordial relationship based on shared values and mutual understanding. However, the referenced news report appears to have been deliberately skewed to misrepresent the location of the oil well—situated within Ondo State—as belonging to Ogun State, for undisclosed reasons.

"For the record, the oil well in question is located on Eba Island, which has historically been part of Ilaje/Mahin Country in the defunct Lagos Colony under Governor John Hawley Glover before the 1914 Amalgamation. Following the amalgamation, it became part of the old Ondo Province, specifically the Okitipupa Division, and was designated as a Forestry Reserve of Ondo Province under Atijere Native Authority."  

Sowore noted, "Subsequently, Eba Island was incorporated into the Ilaje District Council, with Atijere as its headquarters around 1950. When Ilaje/Ese-Odo Local Government Area was created in 1975, the island remained under its jurisdiction. In 1997, when Ese-Odo was separated into a distinct local government, Eba Island continued to be an integral part of Ilaje Local Government, where it remains to this day—still designated as an Ondo State Forestry Reserve.

"The communities surrounding the oil well—Ago Alaja, Balogun Bode, and Fasuyi—have always been cluster villages of the Atijere community. In fact, successive village heads of Balogun Bode and Fasuyi, including the current Baale, Chief Segun  Fasuyi, have been installed by the Ondo State Government. Moreover, all inhabitants of these villages are indigenes of Ondo State." 

He added, "In accordance with Item 39 of the Second Schedule (Part 1) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) and other relevant governing laws, oil fields and oil mining fall under the Exclusive Legislative List of the Federation. As such, oil wells are assets of the Federation. However, their locations, including the host communities and states, must be clearly defined. In this case, the well is situated in Atijere community, Ondo State.

"In light of this, the Ondo State Government has encouraged officers and men of the Nigerian Navy Forward Base, Igbokoda and the State local security/survelillance body to collaborate with other security agencies in Ogun State for joint patrols to prevent criminal elements from accessing the facility.

"Going forward, we call on the National Boundary Commission (NBC) and relevant Federal Government agencies to provide the necessary information and documentary evidence to dispel the unnecessary controversy that the earlier misleading report seeks to create.

"Ondo State Government assures the Federal Government of maximum protection of the asset and full cooperation in establishing the true location/host community of the facility."  

Topics
Oil