
How Engr. Oloche Agidani is Positioning Himself as the Bridge between Benue Southās past and future.
Benue South politics has always been a conversation between two worlds. On one side are the elders who carry the memory of struggles and compromises. On the other are the youths who want jobs, power, roads, and a seat at the table now.
For years, those two worlds have talked past each other. Engr. Oloche Gabriel Agidani, APC aspirant for Benue South Senatorial District in 2027, believes it is time they started talking through each other.
From the Boardroom to the Village Square
Agidaniās background reads like a technocratās resume. He spent over 15 years working on Nigeriaās power and infrastructure systems ā first at the Energy Commission of Nigeria and the Millennium Development Goals Office, then with the Japan International Cooperation Agency. There, he played strategic roles in Nigeriaās Energy Transition Plan, the expansion of transmission networks, and renewable energy access for underserved communities.
āPolicy means nothing if it doesnāt turn into a hospital bed, a lit street, or a job for a young graduateā
ā Engr. Oloche Agidani
Today, as Managing Director of Agonye Nigeria Limited, he leads energy, construction, and consulting projects that create jobs and expand infrastructure.
But his name is also showing up in village squares. In Agatu and Otukpo, residents point to the renovated Comprehensive Primary Healthcare Center in Obagaji, the rehabilitated police station, and the Divisional Police Headquarters in Otukpo that got a facelift under his facilitation.
A Bridge, not a Barrier
What sets Agidani apart in the 2027 race is positioning.
To the older generation, heās the son of former lawmaker Solomon Umoru Agidani ā a name that carries institutional memory and respect. He speaks their language of structure, process, and legacy.
To the wider Zone C electorate, he frames his campaign around inclusivity across all 9 local government areas of Benue South: Ado, Agatu, Apa, Obi, Ogbadibo, Ohimini, Oju, Okpokwu, and Otukpo. His argument is that any senator must deliver projects and representation that cut across these LGAs, not just their home base.
In a zone where the conversation is now about equity, zoning, and generational change, that dual credibility matters.
The Vision Heās Selling
Agidaniās pitch is practical: move Benue South from waiting on Abuja to attracting partnerships.
His focus areas:
āPeople-centered governance means asking one question: Does this make life better for the average person in Benue South?
Key Projects Linked to Agidani in Zone C
ProjectĀ Ā Location Impact
Renovation of PHC Obagaji*Ā Ā Agatu LGAĀ Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Improved access to quality healthcare for residents
Renovation of Police StationĀ Obagaji, Agatu LGA Better working conditions for security personnel
Renovation of Divisional HQĀ Ā Ā Otukpo LGAĀ Ā Ā Ā Ā Strengthened security infrastructure in Zone C
Youth Skills EngagementĀ Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Zone-wideĀ Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā connecting youth to international opportunities
Why the Cap Fits Now
Benue South in 2027 is at a crossroads. The zoning debate is loud. The demand for generational change is real. And the frustration with politics as usual is palpable.
Agidani offers a middle path. Heās not running against the elders, and heās not dismissing the youths. Heās positioning himself as the person who can translate the eldersā experience into the youthsā energy, and the youthsā demands into projects the system can deliver.
Thatās why some within the APC describe him as āthe bridge.ā
The Test Ahead
The real test will be the APC primary and, if he gets the ticket, the general election. Name recognition, grassroots structure, and funding will matter as much as vision.
But in a political climate where voters say they are tired of rhetoric, Agidaniās record of turning policy into projects gives him a concrete story to tell.
For now, the message is clear: Benue South doesnāt have to choose between honoring its past and building its future.
If the cap fits anyone to bridge that gap, Agidani and his supporters believe it fits him.