Imeko Afon Explained

Official Name:Imeko Afon
Settlement Type:LGA
Pushpin Map:Nigeria
Pushpin Mapsize:250
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Nigeria
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Nigeria
Subdivision Name1:Ogun State
Leader Title:Local Government Chairman
Leader Name:Fadipe Yaya Akande (APC)
Unit Pref:Metric
Area Total Km2:1711.43
Population As Of:2006 census
Population Total:82,217
Population Blank1 Title:Occupation
Population Blank1:Predominantly Farmers and Interborder trading
Population Blank2 Title:Religions
Timezone:WAT
Utc Offset:+1
Coordinates:7.6333°N 54°W
Module:
Wikidata:yes
Zoom:8
Marker:village
Postal Code Type:3-digit postal code prefix
Postal Code:111[1]
Iso Code:NG.OG.IA

Imeko Afon is a Local Government Area in the west of Ogun State, Nigeria bordering the Republic of Benin. Its headquarters are in the town of Imeko at coordinates .

Location

The local Government was created from the old Egbado North Local Government in December 1996, during the military regime of General Sani Abacha.The land area is about 1711.43km2. The land is rolling, with small hills rising between 15 and 70 metres above sea level. The Yewa River runs through the area from North to South, with its tributaries, the rivers Oyan and Oha.The LGA is bounded in the north by Oyo State, to the east by the Abeokuta North LGA, to the south by the Yewa North LGA and to the west it shares an international border with Benin. The international border is 93km (58miles), and is one of the most accessible stretches of border between the two countries.

The Local Government is divided into ten political wards: Imeko, Afon, Ilara, Iwoye/Jabata, Idofa, Owode/Obada/Idi-Ayin, Moriwi / Matale /Oke-Agbede, Agborogbomo, Atapele and Kajole / Agberiodo.Imeko, the LGA headquarters, is about 20km (10miles) by road from Ketou, a major trading town in Benin. The second largest settlement, Ilara, merges into Kanga in Benin.

People

The 1991 population census gave a population of about 118,339.The people are mostly Yorubas belonging to the Ketu subgroup, but there are significant numbers of Ohori and Egun speaking people.As a border community, other West African people live in the LGA, including a substantial number of Fulani nomads.

In March 2011, just before the April National elections, it was reported that a mass transfer of teachers disloyal to the Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN) had begun in the LGA.[2]

Economy

Farming is the main economic activity.The vegetation is a mixture of savannah belt and sparse forest suitable for cattle raising, with the advantage of being free of Tse-tse flies. The climate is tropical, with a rainy season commencing around March and ending in November. The soil is fertile, and Cassava and Tomatoes are grown in large quantities. Cotton grown in the LGA supplies the Yaru, tread and textile industries in Benin Republic. Other crops are pepper, maize, groundnuts, yams, vegetables, cocoa, cashew and teak. The LGA has 43 public primary schools and 6 secondary schools, and a number of private schools.Tourist attractions include Celestial City, center of the Celestial Church of Christ, Imeko, Odosuuru waterfalls, Mount Boomu, Afon and Jabata Forest.To encourage tourists the LGA is named the "virgin land", and in 2010 a 20km (10miles) Imeko-Oke-Agbede-Iwoye road was being built.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Post Offices- with map of LGA . NIPOST . 2009-10-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121126042849/http://www.nipost.gov.ng/postcode.aspx . November 26, 2012 .
  2. Web site: Gale of Transfers Hit Teachers in Imeko-Afon . Daily Independent (Lagos) . Femi Ogbonnikan . 29 March 2011.
  3. As Imeko-Afon LG Inaugurates Elders' Council (1) . . Segun Adeleye . 14 July 2010 . 2011-06-12.