Opinion

NDDC Board Inauguration: A Lost Battle?

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The agitation for the inauguration of a substantive board for the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) has posed growing concern for most stakeholders in the region. It would be recalled that in the wake of the sack of the last substantive board, which led to the setting up of an interim board to administer the affairs of the commission, and later appointment of sole administrator, there was a clamour for the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to put in place a substantive board instead. The Governors of oil producing states in the South-South had vehemently objected to the continued running of the NDDC by an interim administration. The Ijaw National Congress, the apex pressure group of the Ijaw Ethnic Nationality and the youth arm, the Ijaw Youth Council,  as well as several splinter groups that claim to be vanguards of the interests of the Ijaw people, seem to have lost their voice in the struggle to enthrone a substantive board.
What is baffling is that even the dreaded Niger Delta agitators or ex-militants or war lords whose voice and position had held sway in other matters that relate to the Niger Delta interest, seemed to have been cowered into submitting to the whims and caprices of the superior power. Some of the groups are now singing off- key and discordant tunes as some support the interim administration or sole administratorship management model of the commission and others object. But how what appeared to be a unanimous concern that attracted the collaboration of virtually all Niger Delta leaders is today dividing the rank and file of the Niger Delta leadership across the board, remains a puzzle to this writer and several other concerned Niger Delta people.  Could the vocal proponents and agitators for a substantive board have been induced to give up the struggle? Have they jettisoned the struggle because of the viral philosophy that Nigeria and her component units are not worth dying for?
The Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government, through the then  Minister of  Niger Delta Affairs, Chief Godswill Akpabio, had painted a picture that the continued delay in inaugurating a substantive board was consequent upon the forensic audit of the commission. And he promised that when the audit was concluded, the board will be inaugurated to ensure that new wine is not put in old bottles neither should there be a return to status quo ante.  But those appear to be mere gimmicks and lullabies to quieten the agitators over the clamour for a substantive board, because over a year after the forensic audit was concluded and report submitted to the president, there is no light at theend of the tunnel on the inauguration of a substantive board. Besides, despite the can of worms and the gory activities that took place in the NDDC, according to the startling disclosures of the audit panel, nothing that suggests a purge or discipline is evident on the culprits to serve as deterrent to others. Punishment to corrupt public servants is the incentive to God-fearing, and honest ones to continue to sustain the value system.
Going by the lackluster attitude of the Buhari-led Federal Government to drive accountability and transparency through the recovery of stolen commonwealth of the impoverished oil producing communities that the NDDC is a steward to, and prosecute the perpetrators, the renewed call by two groups in the Niger Delta to inaugurate a substantive board for the commission, may as well be treated with levity and disdain. The  Community Development Committee of Oil and Gas Producing Areas of the Niger Delta and Oil Mineral Producing Communities Traditional Rulers Forum, had warned that the delay in the inauguration of the substantive Board of the NDDC may lead to renewed hostilities in the oil-rich Niger Delta region.
The groups had in a statement signed by Joseph Ambakederimo and Kingsley Arthur for the two groups respectively, urged the Minister of  Niger Delta Affairs, Obong  Umana Okon, to end the “ongoing charade of the illegal sole administratorship and avoid getting himself sucked (sic) into macabre dance of shame in the NDDC”.
Only time will tell if Umana will build on the “defective” foundation that has elicited the hue and cry of stakeholders or will carve a niche for himself by ensuring a paradigm shift from the desire to sustain a Sole Administrator management structure for the NDDC as inherited.
Change is the only thing that is permanent but it takes a strong will and integrity to drive positive change. It is not found in the province of mean people.

By: Igbiki Benibo

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