Features
NDDC Board And Expectations Of Niger Deltans
President Goodluck Jonathan has charged the new board for the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), not dabble into the political intrigues of the Niger Delta region.
Jonathan, who gave the warning after the inauguration of the 18-man board in Abuja, called on the new NDDC board, to learn from the errors of their predecessors by avoiding partisan politics.
“I believe you will learn from the mistakes of your immediate predecessors. I always emphasise that people must not play politics with the development of our people.
“The past board was camping all kinds of criminals in hotels in the name of helping politicians. If I hear that, I will be very angry with you. You must focus on the development of the Niger Delta…,’’ he said.
Jonathan also called on the new board to set new performance standards in the Niger Delta region. He appealed to the board, which is expected to serve out the tenure of the board dissolved in September, and the Federal Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs to complement the training of repentant militants under the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme by initiating skills’ acquisition programmes for other youths in the region.
The board has Dr Christian Obo as its Managing Director, while Mr. L.E.J. Konbaye serves as Executive Director, Finance & Accounts and Mr Edikan Eshett as Executive Director, Projects.
The board’s Chairman, Tebepah has pledged that his team would strive to meet the people’s expectations, and that the board would also work in line with the transformation agenda of the Jonathan administration.
The journey toward the new board began on Sept. 13, when President Goodluck Jonathan formally announced the dissolution of the third Board of Directors and management of the NDDC headed by Air Vice Marshal Larry Koinyan.
NDDC was established in 2000 by the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo as an interventionist agency to foster development in the Niger Delta area in a structured and coordinated manner.
The commission had two previous management boards. The first was chaired by Chief Onyema Ugochukwu from Abia, while the second was headed by Ambassador Sam Edem from Akwa Ibom. The two boards witnessed some crises which, according to observers, believed hindered their efforts to alleviate the sufferings of the Niger Delta people via purposeful programmes.
The third board, which was inaugurated by former President Umaru Yar’Adua on Aug. 6, 2009, however, failed to douse the crisis, as the government and the people sooner got fed up with the crises trailing the boards’ assignment.
The board was, therefore, dissolved in September, following the recommendations by an administrative panel of inquiry constituted by the Secretary to Government of the Federation, Chief Anyim Pius Anyim.
Problems started in the third NDDC board on Dec. 14, 2009 when Mr. Pave Aginighan, the Executive Director, (Finance and Administration), reported, the Managing Director, Mr. Chibuzor Ugwuoha to the board chairman, Air Vice Marghal Kionyan, accusing him of non-compliance with a directive regarding the change of signatories to the commission’s bank accounts.
Besides, there was a disagreement between the Koinyan-led board and Ugwuoha over the management of some NDDC projects worth N69 billion.
The board also queried alleged transfer of $20 million (about N3 billion) from the NDDC’s account in Britain’s Union Bank to the UK branch of First Bank Plc. This led to the inauguration of the administrative panel chaired by Mr Steve Oronsaye, which finally led to the board’s dissolution.
While the crisis lasted, observers noted that most projects awarded by the commission were either poorly executed or abandoned by contractors, as little attention was given to the projects’ supervision by NDDC officials.
Apparently irked by the controversies that affected the service delivery of successive NDDC management teams, many stakeholders stress the need for the government to appoint persons who could oversee the implementation of the commission’s master plan into its board.
Observers recall that about 10 years ago, the NDDC initiated a development master plan that was hinged on a comprehensive analysis of the development, imperatives, challenges and opportunities in the Niger Delta area. The plan, which noted that the Niger Delta region is rich in human and natural resources, however, stressed that poverty was widespread in the area
Noting the high incidence of diseases and infant mortality in the area, the plan stressed the need to tackle the region’s poor sanitation, while boosting its industrial development. It also underscored the need to develop the area’s transportation system, while addressing problems relating to erratic electricity supply, poor education and health facilities.
Besides, the plan outlined vast opportunities existing in agricultural production and crop processing, aqua culture, livestock production and solid minerals exploitation, as well as in oil and gas development ventures in the upstream and downstream sectors.
Observers, nonetheless, bemoan the failure to record substantial achievements in the Niger Delta area’s development, 10 years after the launch of the master plan, insisting that this constitute a food for thought for the new NDDC board.
Stakeholders, therefore, urge the new board members to give quality service delivery and avoid the temptation of viewing their appointments as a chance to have a cut in the national cake.
Chief Don Ubani, Abia State’s Commissioner for Information and Strategy, stressed the need for the new NDDC board to be conversant with the rationale behind the commission’s establishment and work towards actualising the specific objectives.
“NDDC is an agency set up to make the people of Niger Delta region happy as a result of their God-given natural resources, which also serve as the economic nerve-centre of the nation.
“If the new board members go for personal aggrandisement at the expense of the overall interests of the region, that will scuttle the vision of the founding fathers of the NDDC and the government,’’ he said.
On his part, Mr Sampson Akanimo, a conservationist, urged members of the new NDDC board to refrain from the temptation of having the notion that their appointments were some kind of political rewards.
Akanimo, who hails from Akwa Ibom, noted that many people in the Niger Delta area viewed the NDDC’s operational approach, since its inception, as not purposeful enough.
“In the area of infrastructure development, the NDDC ought to have completed the construction of the Niger Delta Coastal Road and the development of new towns in each of the nine constituent states of the region, as stated in the master plan,’’ he said.
Akanimo suggested that the services of professional developers should be engaged by the NDDC, just like the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), to oversee the implementation of the commission’s projects.
“The people are eager to see the NDDC master plan, drawn up by Chief Onyema Ugochukwu-led board of directors, implemented to the letter. This is because most of the projects initiated outside the plan have all collapsed,’’ he said.
President of Movement of Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), Mr Ledum Mitee, said the actions so far taken by the government to address the needs of the youths in the Niger Delta region were very inadequate.
“Economic policies in the region have of late been afflicted by what could be termed ‘Acute Youth Deficiency Syndrome’, policy bereft of the youths’ interests,’’ he said.
Mitee also noted that government at all levels, interventionist agencies and oil firms must necessarily pursue a youth policy that was different from the current tactics of placating the most violent or militant segment of the youths.
Meanwhile, Mr Martins Amabipi, a Port Harcourt-based public relations practitioner has stressed the need for the new NDDC board to sanitise the commission and reposition it for effective service delivery.
“Right from the inception of Oil Mineral Producing Areas Development Commission (OMPADEC) to the current NDDC set-up, the system has been embroiled in crises and corruption. This development defeats the rationale behind the establishment of the commission.
“Fortunately, the people’s expectations are still high but if the menace of corruption is not adequately tackled, it will be extremely difficult to implement the master plan for the Niger Delta’s development, drawn up by the administration of Ugochukwu,’’ he said.
Onyeukwu is of the News Agency of Nigeria.
Francis Onyeukwu