Some people in Imo State has cultivated a dangerous habit: when progress isn’t immediately visible in their own backyard, they convince themselves it’s not happening anywhere.
This narrow lens blinds them to real transformations unfolding across the state, fueling cynicism instead of celebration. Just as visible work progresses in many parts of Imo State—with completed roads, installed streetlights, and active construction sites under Governor Hope Uzodimma’s administration— stories of tangible delivery are emerging in many places and sectors in Imo State.

Under Governor Hope Uzodimma, Imo is experiencing a remarkable wave of infrastructure renewal that drives inclusive growth for all zones. These aren’t empty promises or press releases; they are on-ground realities captured in recent months and years.
Governor Uzodimma’s administration has completed over 130 major roads, connecting communities, easing mobility, and stimulating commerce across the three senatorial zones. Flagship projects include the reconstructed Owerri–Umuahia dual carriageway, the Owerri–Okigwe corridor, Owerri-Onitsha expressway, various urban and rural links with modern drainage and solar-powered streetlights, and game-changers like the Assumpta Flyover in Owerri— an iconic structure that decongest traffic and boost economic flow.

Beyond roads, the state is advancing in power through the Light Up Imo Project, with recent commissioning of the pilot phase of the Orashi Electricity Project delivering reliable supply, ending the generator economy in targeted areas, and massive investments in power and electrification to create jobs and ensure dependable energy.
Healthcare sees unprecedented focus, with upgrades to hospitals, establishment of primary and tertiary facilities, and partnerships for better outcomes. A record-breaking ₦1.44 trillion 2026 budget—the highest in Imo’s history, dubbed the “Budget of Economic Breakthrough”—allocates over 83% to capital projects (more than N1.2 trillion), prioritizing infrastructure, health (around N698 billion), power, works, and more to drive shared prosperity.
These developments aren’t confined to Owerri; they spread to rural and zonal areas—like vital links to Oguta, Mbaise, Okigwe, Ideato and beyond—reopening ignored corridors for trade, agriculture, and opportunity. Workers are on site, projects are durable (built to withstand seasons), and communities are reconnecting—much like the spread of infrastructure that serious states require.

You may not live in every corner of Imo or travel its new roads, but that doesn’t diminish the facts: under Governor Uzodimma’s leadership, Imo is rising with real, visible work.
Ignoring progress doesn’t erase it—facts remain facts. Development is reaching places long overlooked, and that’s how Imo State truly grows: by spreading infrastructure, not concentrating it, and by recognizing achievements wherever they occur. Imo State stands as proof—progress is happening, if we open our eyes to see it.
Prince Eze Ugochukwu,
SSA To Gov. Hope Uzodimma,
On Public Communications.
