Ago-Oba
Ago-Oba is an electoral ward 13 in the city of Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria.
It is part of the Abeokuta South Local Government Area.
Has about 250 Village in England
Location
Ago Oba is a community in the Egba section of Abeokuta whose people claim to originate from the ancient Oba Kingdom. It is not clear whether Ago Oba was formed due to the migration of Egba people during the 19th century Yoruba wars, or whether the people arrived at an earlier time. The villages under the Oba Kingdom are as follows: Pakudi Village, Agbamaya Village, Lodan Village, Okuribido Village, Abule Tuntun Village, Olorunda Village, Ikeja Village, Omilende Village, Agbanikanda Village, Igboti Village and Akija Village, Oba-Aro village, Oba-Oluwo village, Seriki etcThe main economic activities are trading, textile making, artisan work and transportation activities.
Houses tend to be occupied by anywhere from six to twenty people, using shallow wells for water. This water does not meet World Health Organization standards, and when untreated creates a serious health risk.
In the past, the ward has been subject to perennial flooding, but recently efforts have been made to improve the drainage.
The Anglican community in the Ago-Oba Parish is served by St. Michael's Church.
Notable people
Former Ogun state governor Olusegun Osoba holds the traditional title of Oluwo of Ago-Oba, among others.In the April 2011 Presidential elections Osoba cast his vote in Ago-Oba for candidate Nuhu Ribadu of the Action Congress of Nigeria. Ribadu was the clear winner in the ward, with 142 votes to 65 for the PDP and 5 for the CPC.
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo is of the Owu people. When his wife Stella Obasanjo died in 2005, her body was brought from Lagos to the Winners Chapel in Ago-Oba, from where she was taken to be buried in the Obasanjo family compound in nearby Ita-Eko.
Alexander Abiodun Adebayo Bada, the second leader of the Celestial Church of Christ Worldwide, was the son of the Baale, or paramount head of Ago-Oba, a former president of the Ikeja customary court in Lagos and the organist of the African Church in Ereko-Lagos.
The Seriki of Egbaland, Dr. Lateef Adegbite, has his office in Ago-Oba.