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The Ikorodu Oga; We the citizens of Ikorodu Town of Lagos State of Nigeria, in UK & Ireland have found a common ground for embracing ourselves and appreciate the value of a concerted effort towards the co-ordination of social-cultural activities geared towards the development of our people and town.
We have decided that for the ultimate reason of realising the objectives we set ourselves and establishment of an organisational structure for the purpose of execution of intents and purposes.
As a result of the above we have decided to enact for ourselves a governing document which shall take precedence over in all matters to which it relates and shall from the nucleus of rules and regulations, decisions and resolution, etc.
Background; Ikorodu town is a division of Lagos State of Nigeria. Ikorodu Town, Title Head, Ayangburen of Ikorodu We have been blessed with a strong common language, which is "Ijebu". In Nigeria today, Ikorodu town remains as the most elegant and sociable society in the country. It is on the basis of profound love and a strong cordial relationship in midst of this town, which inspired a group of indigenes of Ikorodu Town that prompted them to find a common ground for embracing ourselves in the United Kingdom and Ireland
Lagos City in south-west Nigeria, in Lagos State on the Bight of Benin (an arm of the Atlantic Ocean). Built on several islands and adjacent parts of the mainland, it is Nigeria's largest city, chief port, and economic and cultural centre. Important districts include the old city, now the commercial district, on western Lagos Island; Ikoyi Island, situated just east of Lagos Island; Apapa, the chief port district, on the mainland; low-lying Victoria Island; industrialized Iddo Island; and a group of mainland suburbs (incorporated as part of the city in 1967), Ebute Metta, Yaba, Suru-Lere, Mushin, and Ikeja.
The Yoruba people constitute the city's principal ethnic group, although Lagos has a very diverse and fast-growing population as a result of ongoing migration from the rest of Nigeria and neighbouring countries. Lagos receives most of Nigeria’s import trade, in particular consumer goods, foodstuffs, motor vehicles, machinery, and industrial raw materials. Its export trade in timber and agricultural products such as cocoa, palm oil, and peanuts has declined since the early 1970s. More than half of Nigeria’s industrial capacity is located in Lagos’s mainland suburbs.