Ondo State government has approved the movement of the University of Medical Sciences (UNIMED) Teaching Hospital Complex to the Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA) to serve as its College of Medicine and Teaching Hospital.
Speaking with journalists after the State Council meeting presided over by Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa, the State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Banji Ajaka said the Akure hospital complex would now be ceded to the Federal Government to serve as FUTA’s main medical sciences facility.
According to Ajaka, the move follows President Bola Tinubu’s approval for FUTA to establish a College of Medicine and a Teaching Hospital.
“The handover includes the transfer of staff, infrastructure, equipment, and liabilities. All employees will be absorbed into the FUTA Teaching Hospital under the Federal Government,” the Commissioner said.
He added that the development was expected to strengthen healthcare delivery in the state while advancing FUTA’s ambition to become a leading centre for medical sciences in Nigeria.
Briefing journalists, the Commissioner for Agriculture and Forestry, Engr. Leye Akinola, announced new measures approved by the Council to protect farmers from the impact of the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) which bans crops cultivated from deforested areas.
He said the government has approved agroforestry practices across selected forests while ensuring reserved areas remain intact.
He added that cocoa, cashew, oil palm, and rubber farmers will be permitted to continue operations under strict mapping and traceability systems.
“By December 30, 2025, any crop that cannot be traced to a mapped farm risks being rejected at the EU market. To safeguard livelihoods, the state will support farm mapping and grant farmers permits to continue operations,” Akinola added.
The Council also approved a review of tariffs across agricultural produce and timber value chains, aligning Ondo with other South-West states under the DAWN Commission framework.
For his part, the Commissioner for Information, Mr. Idowu Ajanaku, clarified that each cabinet member has been directed to nominate a road project in their respective local government areas to impact communities directly.
He stressed that the initiative was not for private or partisan interests but to ensure equitable development across the 18 local government areas of the state.
Ajanaku said, “These roads are outside the 2025 budgeted projects. They are supplementary interventions to touch communities and enhance connectivity.”
Meanwhile, the Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Alhaji Hamidu Takuro, said the Council also ratified the appointment of Joseph Ilesanmi as the monarch of Sosan in Akoko South-East local government area of the state.