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Why The South-east Is Nigeria’s Fastest Growing And Urbanising Region—and Why... - Politics - Nairaland 6i6ls

Why The South-east Is Nigeria’s Fastest Growing And Urbanising Region—and Why... (2917 Views)

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tonychristopher: 6:15am On May 24
The South-East region of Nigeria, home to the Igbo ethnic group, is undergoing one of the most remarkable transformations in the country today. From the hills of Nsukka to the bustling streets of Aba, and even stretching beyond into Delta State, the region is witnessing rapid urbanisation, town-to-town connectivity, and the merging of cities into sprawling, functional conurbations. This unprecedented development is something the rest of Nigeria—especially the South-West—must emulate for balanced national progress.


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Conurbation: Cities Merging into Mega-Urban Corridors

A defining characteristic of Igbo regional growth is the way multiple towns are organically growing into each other, forming vast urban corridors. A prime example is the Onitsha–Asaba–Igbuzor axis. Onitsha, already a commercial capital with one of Africa’s largest markets, is expanding westward across the Niger River into Asaba—the capital of Delta State. Asaba is rapidly urbanising and attracting both private estates and government institutions. From Asaba, the development continues northward into Igbuzor, a growing town that is benefiting from the economic spillover. In just a few years, this entire stretch is poised to become a single, uninterrupted urban region—one of the first truly cross-state mega cities in Nigeria.

Likewise, in Anambra State, towns like Onitsha, Nkpor, Ogidi, Obosi, Ogbunike, and Awka are forming a conurbation, ed by strong road networks and constant real estate development. In Abia, Aba continues to stretch toward Umuahia, while Owerri in Imo State expands outward to Mbaise, Ngor Okpala, and Orlu.

In Enugu, the capital is urbanising along a corridor that leads to Nsukka, and in Ebonyi, Abakaliki is fast becoming a commercial and istrative hub, drawing in nearby towns like Afikpo, Ishielu, and Onueke.


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Why the South-East Is Growing So Fast

1. Entrepreneurship and Industry: Cities like Aba, Nnewi, and Onitsha are world-renowned for commerce and manufacturing. Aba is a hub for indigenous industries like footwear and clothing, while Nnewi leads in auto parts and light machinery.


2. Diaspora Investment: Igbo communities abroad are heavily involved in developing their home regions. Estates, schools, hotels, and hospitals in Awka, Enugu, and Asaba are often funded by investments from the diaspora.


3. Community-Driven Development: In towns like Orlu, Nsukka, and Ohafia, locals organise through town unions and development associations to construct roads, schools, and healthcare facilities—without waiting for the government.


4. Strong Educational Base: With institutions like UNN (Nsukka), UNIZIK (Awka), and FUTO (Owerri), the South-East has one of the highest literacy rates in Nigeria. This educated population fuels innovation and local capacity development.


5. Compact, Interconnected Settlements: The short distances between towns—often less than 30 minutes apart—make it easy to move goods, people, and services. This physical closeness is a natural enabler of urban fusion.




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Why Other Regions—Especially the South-West—Must Catch Up

The South-West is known for mega cities like Lagos, but its development is largely concentrated and government-reliant. In contrast, the South-East thrives on decentralised, community-led, and diaspora-fueled urbanisation. Here's what the South-West can learn:

Decentralisation: Beyond Lagos and Ibadan, towns like Ogbomosho, Ifo, Owo, and Ado-Ekiti need focused development to distribute growth and reduce migration pressure.

Diaspora Engagement: The Igbo diaspora is more visibly active in building their homeland. Yoruba states can create frameworks to attract and utilise diaspora capital for local development.

Community Empowerment: The South-East's success lies in people-driven development. The South-West can revive community associations and give them a bigger role in development planning.

Intra-regional Integration: The example of Onitsha–Asaba–Igbuzor proves that even across state boundaries, cities can connect seamlessly. The South-West can mirror this by building urban corridors from Lagos to Abeokuta, Ibadan to Ilorin, and beyond.



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Conclusion

From Onitsha to Awka, Owerri to Orlu, Nsukka to Enugu, and now Asaba to Igbuzor, the South-East is becoming one giant network of thriving urban centres. It is a powerful example of organic, people-driven development. While the federal government remains slow in many areas, the South-East is not waiting—it is building itself, one city and one investment at a time.

Nigeria’s future depends on balanced regional growth. The rest of the country, especially the South-West, must take a cue from the Igbo region’s unmatched pace of urban transformation and begin to replicate it with urgency and purpose.

14 Likes 5 Shares

helinues: 6:36am On May 24
Yet it's the most marginalized region in Nigeria

Walahi, weather na learner in the instability

28 Likes 4 Shares

Ofemannnu: 6:51am On May 24
Good for you.
Kudos.
Eboofa: 6:55am On May 24
tonychristopher:


The South-East region of Nigeria, home to the Igbo ethnic group, is undergoing one of the most remarkable transformations in the country today. From the hills of Nsukka to the bustling streets of Aba, and even stretching beyond into Delta State, the region is witnessing rapid urbanisation, town-to-town connectivity, and the merging of cities into sprawling, functional conurbations. This unprecedented development is something the rest of Nigeria—especially the South-West—must emulate for balanced national progress.


---

Conurbation: Cities Merging into Mega-Urban Corridors

A defining characteristic of Igbo regional growth is the way multiple towns are organically growing into each other, forming vast urban corridors. A prime example is the Onitsha–Asaba–Igbuzor axis. Onitsha, already a commercial capital with one of Africa’s largest markets, is expanding westward across the Niger River into Asaba—the capital of Delta State. Asaba is rapidly urbanising and attracting both private estates and government institutions. From Asaba, the development continues northward into Igbuzor, a growing town that is benefiting from the economic spillover. In just a few years, this entire stretch is poised to become a single, uninterrupted urban region—one of the first truly cross-state mega cities in Nigeria.

Likewise, in Anambra State, towns like Onitsha, Nkpor, Ogidi, Obosi, Ogbunike, and Awka are forming a conurbation, ed by strong road networks and constant real estate development. In Abia, Aba continues to stretch toward Umuahia, while Owerri in Imo State expands outward to Mbaise, Ngor Okpala, and Orlu.

In Enugu, the capital is urbanising along a corridor that leads to Nsukka, and in Ebonyi, Abakaliki is fast becoming a commercial and istrative hub, drawing in nearby towns like Afikpo, Ishielu, and Onueke.


---

Why the South-East Is Growing So Fast

1. Entrepreneurship and Industry: Cities like Aba, Nnewi, and Onitsha are world-renowned for commerce and manufacturing. Aba is a hub for indigenous industries like footwear and clothing, while Nnewi leads in auto parts and light machinery.


2. Diaspora Investment: Igbo communities abroad are heavily involved in developing their home regions. Estates, schools, hotels, and hospitals in Awka, Enugu, and Asaba are often funded by investments from the diaspora.


3. Community-Driven Development: In towns like Orlu, Nsukka, and Ohafia, locals organise through town unions and development associations to construct roads, schools, and healthcare facilities—without waiting for the government.


4. Strong Educational Base: With institutions like UNN (Nsukka), UNIZIK (Awka), and FUTO (Owerri), the South-East has one of the highest literacy rates in Nigeria. This educated population fuels innovation and local capacity development.


5. Compact, Interconnected Settlements: The short distances between towns—often less than 30 minutes apart—make it easy to move goods, people, and services. This physical closeness is a natural enabler of urban fusion.




---

Why Other Regions—Especially the South-West—Must Catch Up

The South-West is known for mega cities like Lagos, but its development is largely concentrated and government-reliant. In contrast, the South-East thrives on decentralised, community-led, and diaspora-fueled urbanisation. Here's what the South-West can learn:

Decentralisation: Beyond Lagos and Ibadan, towns like Ogbomosho, Ifo, Owo, and Ado-Ekiti need focused development to distribute growth and reduce migration pressure.

Diaspora Engagement: The Igbo diaspora is more visibly active in building their homeland. Yoruba states can create frameworks to attract and utilise diaspora capital for local development.

Community Empowerment: The South-East's success lies in people-driven development. The South-West can revive community associations and give them a bigger role in development planning.

Intra-regional Integration: The example of Onitsha–Asaba–Igbuzor proves that even across state boundaries, cities can connect seamlessly. The South-West can mirror this by building urban corridors from Lagos to Abeokuta, Ibadan to Ilorin, and beyond.



---

Conclusion

From Onitsha to Awka, Owerri to Orlu, Nsukka to Enugu, and now Asaba to Igbuzor, the South-East is becoming one giant network of thriving urban centres. It is a powerful example of organic, people-driven development. While the federal government remains slow in many areas, the South-East is not waiting—it is building itself, one city and one investment at a time.

Nigeria’s future depends on balanced regional growth. The rest of the country, especially the South-West, must take a cue from the Igbo region’s unmatched pace of urban transformation and begin to replicate it with urgency and purpose.




This is a very apt and Valid observation, but your analysis is not really deep! Growth for growth's sake is not going to help anyone. We do not want the urban squalor associated with Lagos, Mumbai, or even Cairo!

You failed to project the rising youth population that comes with that growth! Do you know how many universities and higher institutions are based in the identified axis.............Agbor-Umunede-igbuzor-asaba-Onitsha/nnewi-Awka-oji-Enugu? The ongoing rehabilitation of Benin/ Asaba road, the construction of the by to the second Naija bridge, and the rehabilitation of the Onitsha /Enugu highway will merge these towns into one market! A rail line between Agbor and Enugu will finish work on that axis........It is left to the governors of Delta, Anambra, and Enugu to put on their thinking caps and cooperate regionally to champion the interest of that vibrant axis. Why not cooperate to build a rail line in conjunction with the federal government?

9 Likes 1 Share

Kdon2: 7:23am On May 24
tonychristopher:




These people and their fake noises☹️

4 Likes

Raf4: 7:46am On May 24
The only reason this is possible is because the whole of SE, available to about 40million ndigbos, is about the size of Oyo state.
Imagine if the whole of Yoruba is confined in Oyo state. All the people, infrastructure, industrial and residential estates in the SW concentrated in Oyo state. Imagine all the old wealth (Da Rocha, Odutolas, Fajemirokuns, Okunowos, Kukus, MKO, Adebisis etc) and current wealth (Adenugas, Alakijas, Tinubus, Kensingtons, Okoyas, Adelekes, Otedolas etc) with all the religious and educational institutions etc are all in Oyo state. SW would have turned to one mega city, and probably the biggest in the world.
You will just discover that your living room is in Lagos State while your bedroom falls within Ogun state. Or you and your girlfriend strolling down the street and you just discover that while you're walking on the Osun state side of the road, your girlfriend is on Ekiti state side.

16 Likes 6 Shares

1Alex: 7:56am On May 24
100% AI
LordBiden(m): 8:14am On May 24
Nice.
ShoeMarket: 8:57am On May 24
Raf4:
The only reason this is possible is because the whole of SE, available to about 40million ndigbos, is about the size of Oyo state.
Imagine if the whole of Yoruba is confined in Oyo state. All the people, infrastructure, industrial and residential estates in the SW concentrated in Oyo state. Imagine all the old wealth (Da Rocha, Odutolas, Fajemirokuns, Okunowos, Kukus, MKO, Adebisis etc) and current wealth (Adenugas, Alakijas, Tinubus, Kensingtons, Okoyas, Adelekes, Otedolas etc) with all the religious and educational institutions etc are all in Oyo state. SW would have turned to one mega city, and probably the biggest in the world.
You will just discover that your living room is in Lagos State while your bedroom falls within Ogun state. Or you and your girlfriend strolling down the street and you just discover that while you're walking on the Osun state side of the road, your girlfriend is on Ekiti state side.




There is no truth in your soul. It's too bad.

17 Likes 1 Share

Chimarto: 9:06am On May 24
You for no mention South West oooo, these people no like fact, all of them are from Lagos, them and lies na 8 and 9

22 Likes 1 Share

ariesbull: 11:44am On May 24
Eboofa:




This is a very apt and Valid observation, but your analysis is not really deep! Growth for growth's sake is not going to help anyone. We do not want the urban squalor associated with Lagos, Mumbai, or even Cairo!

You failed to project the rising youth population that comes with that growth! Do you know how many universities and higher institutions are based in the identified axis.............Agbor-Umunede-igbuzor-asaba-Onitsha/nnewi-Awka-oji-Enugu? The ongoing rehabilitation of Benin/ Asaba road, the construction of the by to the second Naija bridge, and the rehabilitation of the Onitsha /Enugu highway will merge these towns into one market! A rail line between Agbor and Enugu will finish work on that axis........It is left to the governors of Delta, Anambra, and Enugu to put on their thinking caps and cooperate regionally to champion the interest of that vibrant axis. Why not cooperate to build a rail line in conjunction with the federal government?




. Awesome ...the writer and you are making valid points

6 Likes

ariesbull: 11:47am On May 24
Raf4:
The only reason this is possible is because the whole of SE, available to about 40million ndigbos, is about the size of Oyo state.
Imagine if the whole of Yoruba is confined in Oyo state. All the people, infrastructure, industrial and residential estates in the SW concentrated in Oyo state. Imagine all the old wealth (Da Rocha, Odutolas, Fajemirokuns, Okunowos, Kukus, MKO, Adebisis etc) and current wealth (Adenugas, Alakijas, Tinubus, Kensingtons, Okoyas, Adelekes, Otedolas etc) with all the religious and educational institutions etc are all in Oyo state. SW would have turned to one mega city, and probably the biggest in the world.
You will just discover that your living room is in Lagos State while your bedroom falls within Ogun state. Or you and your girlfriend strolling down the street and you just discover that while you're walking on the Osun state side of the road, your girlfriend is on Ekiti state side.

Yoruba and excuses ...I can view the rusty Ibadan and Abeokuta

15 Likes 1 Share

abumeze2010(m): 12:17pm On May 24
Even the places that are developed in the other regions are the hand-work of IGBOS

9 Likes

Ofunaofu: 12:28pm On May 24
helinues:
Yet it's the most marginalized region in Nigeria

Walahi, weather na learner in the instability

One of the worst things that can happen to a man is lying to himself and believing that lie. It distorts his reality and gradually destroys his psyche

10 Likes

lazkizz(m): 1:53pm On May 24
Buildings in Uyo should look like Tokyo (onitsha) the least should be 4 floors upwards, they already have Good quality road network, standard stadium 🏟️ and hotels. All they need is a city metro railway, a mini industrial park, at least 20hrs of electricity and improved security.

In 2yrs time Uyo will descongest Lagos and millions of young Nigerians will move into the city in sreach for a better living environment and for greener pasture. Because to me personally Lagos is over crowded and need to be dis congested, like El Rufia Urbanisation policies in Kaduna city helped dis congested Kano city.

3 Likes

Hussein052(m): 2:06pm On May 24
It is simply due to population
The South eastern region has the highest population density in Nigeria

6 Likes 1 Share

ibechris(m): 2:11pm On May 24
No doubts.

U see those beautiful well planned houses in Aba,Onitsha,Enugu and Our darling Owerri,u can never see such houses in Brown roof regions. The so called ancient of days regions.

Except Lagos that was tly built by Nigerians. No place can be compared with those houses in Nigeria.

A travel is enough to make u ask how are igbos doing it.

13 Likes 2 Shares

Raf4: 4:10pm On May 24
ariesbull:


Yoruba and excuses ...I can view the rusty Ibadan and Abeokuta
No one Is giving any excuses here, but pure statement of facts. Is entire SE bigger than Oyo state?
Raf4: 4:12pm On May 24
ShoeMarket:





There is no truth in your soul. It's too bad.

What exactly is not true in my submission? Just point it out.
tuborme: 7:51pm On May 24
You guys made very good observations, imagine, there was no insecurity in the south east! That place would have become Guangzhou!

1 Like

manck: 12:58am On May 25

2 Likes

manck: 1:09am On May 25

1 Like

manck: 1:12am On May 25

2 Likes

manck: 1:17am On May 25
Raf4:
The only reason this is possible is because the whole of SE, available to about 40million ndigbos, is about the size of Oyo state.
Imagine if the whole of Yoruba is confined in Oyo state. All the people, infrastructure, industrial and residential estates in the SW concentrated in Oyo state. Imagine all the old wealth (Da Rocha, Odutolas, Fajemirokuns, Okunowos, Kukus, MKO, Adebisis etc) and current wealth (Adenugas, Alakijas, Tinubus, Kensingtons, Okoyas, Adelekes, Otedolas etc) with all the religious and educational institutions etc are all in Oyo state. SW would have turned to one mega city, and probably the biggest in the world.
You will just discover that your living room is in Lagos State while your bedroom falls within Ogun state. Or you and your girlfriend strolling down the street and you just discover that while you're walking on the Osun state side of the road, your girlfriend is on Ekiti state side.
this vidèo aŕè south east
manck: 1:18am On May 25
Chimarto:
You for no mention South West oooo, these people no like fact, all of them are from Lagos, them and lies na 8 and 9
What you mean
manck: 1:24am On May 25

1 Like

manck: 2:28am On May 25
Eboofa:




This is a very apt and Valid observation, but your analysis is not really deep! Growth for growth's sake is not going to help anyone. We do not want the urban squalor associated with Lagos, Mumbai, or even Cairo!

You failed to project the rising youth population that comes with that growth! Do you know how many universities and higher institutions are based in the identified axis.............Agbor-Umunede-igbuzor-asaba-Onitsha/nnewi-Awka-oji-Enugu? The ongoing rehabilitation of Benin/ Asaba road, the construction of the by to the second Naija bridge, and the rehabilitation of the Onitsha /Enugu highway will merge these towns into one market! A rail line between Agbor and Enugu will finish work on that axis........It is left to the governors of Delta, Anambra, and Enugu to put on their thinking caps and cooperate regionally to champion the interest of that vibrant axis. Why not cooperate to build a rail line in conjunction with the federal government?




lagos is not a shanty town
rinzaugustine: 2:42am On May 25
helinues:
Yet it's the most marginalized region in Nigeria

Walahi, weather na learner in the instability
Those structures you are seeing are not built by government o Walahi but by individuals- Igbos and most were built after 1970 from the ashes of total destruction of the war

11 Likes

manck: 2:47am On May 25
rinzaugustine:
Those structures you are seeing are not built by government o Walahi but by individuals- Igbos and most were built after 1970 from the ashes of total destruction of the war
the structure were built from money they got from government directly
rinzaugustine: 2:48am On May 25
manck:
the structure were built from money they got from government directly
Nigerian government go carry money give Igbo? You well so?

11 Likes

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Strange:- 700yrs old skeleton couple found holding hands photos, www..net

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