Editorial
NDDC: Beyond The Dissolution (1)
The Federal Government of Nigeria recently sacked the board of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and sent its leadership packing following the report of a Presidential Committee on the commission. This has, to a large extent, confirmed a number of scandalous issues in the commission.
Interestingly, the development has also excited a lot of people within and outside the Niger Delta. Some rights groups have gone on to make suggestions on what the Federal Government needs to do to forestall the repeat of things that took the NDDC to the current path of regrets.
But we think the first point that needs to be made is the commendable step taken by the Presidency to deal with the scandal that rocked the NDDC. This is a step that is uncommon in the recent history of the Nigerian polity. The inability of successive governments to deal promptly and decisively with office abuses, only helped to give vent to the culture of impunity in the land.
While we commend President Goodluck Jonathan for this good effort and hope that the same would be extended to other areas of national need, we think that the real action needed in the NDDC is yet to be touched. Like the first good step, the present government will need to develop the courage to resolve the bundle of contradictions that had become the lot of the commission.
The Biblical question that says “what can the righteous do if the foundation is wrong?” clearly explains the case of the NDDC. From the onset, sections of the Niger Delta raised objections on the content of the law establishing the commission. More than a decade after, the impact of the commission on the Niger Delta is best imagined.
That is why we believe that the present state of affairs gives the Federal Government the best opportunity to re-visit the very foundation, – the Act establishing the commission with a view to redressing the problem from the root. Indeed, the Federal Government must use this opportunity to make clear the role of the commission as against that of the Ministry of Niger Delta.
We recall that at the inception of the commission, there were conflicts over the naming of the commission, as some states involved in the commission did not fall within the geographical Niger Delta, while the objective was also not about a region but on oil producing states in the country.
A lot of groups, then and even now, attack the omnibus role of the commission; the avoidable multiplication of funding the sources and the bloated bureaucracy that was prescribed for the commission. Indeed, we cannot but agree with the rights groups that the commission may have been structured to fail from the beginning.
We still cannot understand why a people who complained of marginalization would be made to also remit part of their meagre resources to a body created by the federal government to use as they please. We cannot also understand why the Federal Government would hinge the funding of the commission on the compliance of sundry groups, if not to find excuses for lapses in funding. We cannot still understand why every state of the Federation should be represented in the commission. What are they sharing, when the funds also come from the Niger Delta States?
The NDDC should be an interventionist agency and should have been structured to be very focused and mobile. But big posts were created to achieve the unintended. Instead of contending with poverty, hunger, lack of infrastructure and pollution, the commission had to deal with how to serve the varied and various interests of the Managing Director, Chairman, Executive Directors, Commissioners, etc.
In addition to taking care of the above contradictions, we think the cleansing of the NDDC should be holistic. The Federal Government should set up a probe of the NDDC from inception. This will bring to light the many abuses and serve as a check on future managers of the commission. Let all those who diverted funds meant for the development of the Niger Delta be made to pay.
Without a doubt, the ability of the present government under the leadership of a Niger Delta son to bring about the needed change will be one of the major tests of this administration. Nigeria cannot continue to evade the proper ways of doing things and expect the best results.
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