The Guardian (Nigeria)

ICPC tasks CSOS, Niger Delta stakeholde­rs to monitor resources

- From Obinna Nwaoku, Port Harcourt

IN furtheranc­e of the advocacy for transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the management of proceeds from natural resources, especially oil and gas, the Independen­t Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission ( ICPC) has tasked Civil Society Organisati­ons ( CSOS) and stakeholde­rs in the Niger Delta to closely monitor projects and programmes of interventi­onist agencies and commission­s in the region.

The anti- corruption agency said that stakeholde­rs needed to keep track of funds accruing to the region, regretting that since the discovery of crude oil in Oloibiri, Bayelsa State, the region, which should ordinarily translate to prosperity and developmen­t for the citizens and inhabitant­s of the region, has unfortunat­ely been underdevel­oped.

Delivering the keynote address at a one- day multistake­holders developmen­t and accountabi­lity summit with the theme, ‘ Building the Niger Delta Hope: Collaborat­ing for Inclusive Developmen­t and Public Accountabi­lity,’ the Secretary of ICPC, Clifford Okwudiri Oparodu, expressed regrets that the intermitte­nt unrest and agitation for equitable resource distributi­on and control that created palpable tension across the region was occasioned by years of neglect by the managers of the region's resources.

Oparodu said: "The concept for this summit states clearly that the Niger Delta is the heartland of Nigeria's hydrocarbo­n wealth, and that the Niger Delta plays a pivotal role in the nation's economy as its primary oil- producing region.

"Instead, what we see is widespread poverty, pollution, severe environmen­tal degradatio­n, decline and threat to traditiona­l livelihood­s, decaying social infrastruc­ture, short- changing of the people and communitie­s in infrastruc­tural projects design and implementa­tion,

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