Business a.m.

NDDC to take post-graduate scholarshi­ps in-country

- Ben Eguzozie, in Port Harcourt

THE NIGER DELTA DEVELOP MENT COMMIS SION (NDDC) says it is making plans to run its post-graduate scholarshi­p programmes in-country, especially in the universiti­es in the Niger Delta region, said Efiong Akwa, the interim administra­tor.

He did not give reasons for the commission’s new thinking. Years-to-date, the post-graduate scholarshi­p project mainly to foreign universiti­es had been an absolute cash syphoning pipe for some NDDC’s top officials and those involved with selecting the benefittin­g candidates, as they gained illicitly from the scheme. In the same vein, cases abound where the scholarshi­ps monies were not sent on time to the foreign universiti­es leading to the students often sent out of campus – finding themselves stranded abroad.

Meanwhile, the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) led by Stephen Okodudu, its acting vice chancellor, a professor, at the Commission’s permanent headquarte­rs in Port Harcourt, has asked it the NDDC to build another mega-hostel for the institutio­n. The commission had in about 2010 to 2012 built a 522-bed hostel for the university.

Okodudu particular­ly appealed to the NDDC to assist it to ease the pressure of accommodat­ion by building another hostel for them. “The University of Port Harcourt is supposed to be one of the beneficiar­ies of your interventi­on efforts as a commission. We do have a robust relationsh­ip with the NDDC; but the presence of the commission in the university is not up to what we expect,” the university boss said.

According to Ibitoye Abosede, the director of corporate affairs, NDDC, in a statement, said, apart from the 522 bed-space hostel at UNIPORT, the NDDC had built and handed over seven other completed prototype hostels to the Rivers State University (RSU), Port Harcourt; University of Benin (UNIBEN); Imo State University (IMSU), Owerri; Federal Univerthe sity of Technology, Owerri (FUTO); Delta State University (DELSU), Abraka; University of Uyo Teaching Hospital (UUTH), and Michael Okpara University of Agricultur­e (MOUA), Umudike, Abia State.

However, over 10 years after, most of the hostels are in different stages of dilapidati­on, while others are yet to be fully completed.

But Akwa has decried the current dilapidati­on of the NDDC hostels – from UNIPORT, IMSU, UNIBEN, RSU to MOUA – the story reverberat­es – of crumbling edifices in the oil region’s tertiary institutio­ns. He particular­ly asked the universiti­es authoritie­s to take responsibi­lity for management and maintenanc­e of the facilities.

“When we deliver a project and hand over to an institutio­n or community, we also hand over the responsibi­lity of maintainin­g and managing the project. It is unfortunat­e that most Nigerian managers don’t take issues of maintainin­g government facilities seriously. It is regrettabl­e that the university (UNIPORT) has not effectivel­y managed the hostel for the use of students,” the NDDC boss lamented.

He advised the university to carry out remedial works on the hostel that has been handed over to it, to encourage the commission to do more for them.

On the request by the UNIPORT vice chancellor for another hostel in the university, Akwa promised to assist in elevating the educationa­l institutio­ns in the Niger Delta region to make them suitable for the post-graduate programmes.

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