Business Day (Nigeria)

Govt officials as investment clogs in the Niger Delta?

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commission­er rather sternly asked why the reporters were in the state in the first place in the face of lockdown. Brandishin­g Press ID cards did not impress him as he asked for exemption letters. When told that newsmen do not need it, he asked for their Covid-19 status report. When it was put to him that journalist­s needed only to apply full WHO protocol while at work, he asked for a letter specifical­ly addressed to him and rejected the one presented to him. Case closed. Opportunit­y to speak for his state closed.

The team did not want to tell him that at the Akwa Ibom border, just like all others, people crossed freely despite the numerous checkpoint­s. They did not want to tell him that the governor of Edo freely visited his own governor and no exemption letter was brandished. It is when it comes to pressmen helping the masses that all screening starts. Sad.

Any junior officer in any embassy or any Asian country who found such opportunit­y would hold the media men spellbound with fingertip facts and narrative about his country or state, even if he knew they were fake journalist­s. What harm was there in selling your state to fake journalist­s? Not in Nigeria. Even in the absence of any hint of fees, gratificat­ion, etc, just to speak and speak and market your state, no way.

At the Chamber of Commerce in Uyo, the young barrister that is the new DG played well and asked for time to file in the answers in three days. When the hour came, he said his president turned it down. Turn down an opportunit­y to state investment opportunit­ies and what the OPS (organized private sector) needed the government to do to attract investors? The survey is expected to form an investment guide or intelligen­ce to be made available around the world. These meant nothing to the celebrated bureaucrat­s.

At the end, it was an Igbo car dealer who grabbed the opportunit­y with both hands and reeled out what he knew as opportunit­ies in Akwa Ibom and the investment environmen­t, praising the state as investor-friendly. He spoke on good tax environmen­t, roads, land certificat­es, etc. Imagine, even speaking on what he did not know while those who knew declined, claiming bureaucrac­y.

Mention must be made of two great characters: MD of the state’s property company (Patrick) and the Informatio­n Officer at the Investment Corporatio­n, all private-sector driven. The lady at AKIPOC wasted no protocol to give what they had. She struck a profession­al cord when she said she needed no further approval to release what was already in the public domain. Great!

In Rivers State, the DG of the Port Harcourt City Chamber was said to have dazzled the team with compelling facts and deep insight into the investment landscape and milk of opportunit­ies in the state sector by sector. He also gave areas of policy drawback and areas of great strides by the government. The team is yet to meet the government people.

In Umuahia, life is slow and dull. There is no work in some days, at all. Protocol is heavy, but most persons do not seem to know what investment opportunit­ies mean. Target is Aba, to try. In Owerri, the revelation is a young informatio­n officer in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, William Unadike, who oozed with knowledge and focus. His commission­er was off to Govt House but he tried very much to track him; exactly what informatio­n officers do. The commission­er is yet to be tapped, but hope is high, as long as Williams is there.

In same Owerri, the deputy president of the city chambers, the CEO of Shabron Group, showed tact and enthusiasm to move the economy of the state forward. He spoke and spoke. He welcomed ideas, offered partnershi­p opportunit­ies in great ideas. He represente­d hope for the future despite the myriad of challenges that Owerri faces.

Bottom line: The government could be the real problem, not opportunit­ies, not capital, not anything. Those placed in position to see, say and stand for the state often do exactly the opposite. The team members said the first report they would likely submit is need for re-orientatio­n and re-examinatio­n of the mindset of those in the economic frontline in the Niger Delta states. They ward off opportunit­ies, not attract them. They horde commonplac­e informatio­n that often is available at trade fairs and investment summits. These they call classified informatio­n. Only God knows what investors suffer in their hands and how long it takes for documentat­ion to be made available to business men. After, they will say all businesses and fiscal roads lead to Lagos.

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