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NDDC Tasks Monarch On N’Delta Master Plan
The Chairman of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba, SAN, has underlined the importance of traditional rulers in the quest to implement the master plan for the Niger Delta region.
Ndoma-Egba spoke when the South-South Monarchs Forum led by the Amayanabo of Nembe in Bayelsa State, King Edmund Daukoru, paid him a courtesy visit at the NDDC headquarters in Port Harcourt.
The NDDC chairman regretted that the Niger Delta Regional Development Master Plan was abandoned shortly after it was launched in 2007, thereby resulting in the haphazard implementation of development projects and programmes in the region.
“We must return to the Master Plan. We have to agree on whether to terminate the current Master Plan, update or upgrade it. And we need the traditional institution to play a role in this process,” he said.
Ndoma-Egba stated that a comprehensive plan was necessary for any meaningful development to take place as no state or region could make progress without a plan.
He said that the NDDC was guided by the need for transparency and accountability, stating that while the commission should insist on getting its dues, it must also be accountable to earn the trust of its stakeholders.
Ndoma-Egba stated that NDDC must not be seen to be in competition with the state governments but should rather collaborate with stakeholders to add more value to the communities in the region.
According to the chairman, the traditional institution played a key role in the relative peace existing now in the Niger Delta.
He added: “There is no doubt that the South-South region has to speak with one voice, and that is why engagements of this nature are very important because it will help us find a common ground. It will help us synchronise our thoughts and our ideas so that whenever and wherever we speak as leaders of the South-South, whether as traditional rulers or political leaders, we speak with one voice.
“I believe that the reality on ground is that the traditional institution plays a role in ensuring peace, mobilising for development, providing a forum for dialogue, or providing a framework for furthering an action with others in this country. If we recognise that as a reality, then there is need to give that reality a legal backing because you cannot play that role in a legal vacuum. So, I support a constitutional role for our traditional institution,” Ndoma-Egba explained.
Susan Serekara-Nwikhana
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