THISDAY

Nigeria’s Maritime Industry on the Brink of a New Dawn

- • Senator Yerima, a former governor of Zamfara State, is the Chairman, Senate Committee on Marine Transport

When a nation, or one of its institutio­ns, bursts into a new era, questions arise. Are the people going to expect more of the same? Are the leaders overwhelme­d by the deluge of expectatio­ns? Is there a redemptive suite of programmes afoot? Is the nation or its institutio­ns on the cusp of new way of doing things? Or are we about to be conned again with grandiose ideas in a daze of musical chairs?

That is the case in the Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency (NIMASA). Prior to the announceme­nt of a new director general and a new governing board, NIMASA has served as a metaphor of what might go wrong with Nigeria, and that is why many an eye, whether optimistic or critical, are set on the agency. Over the past few years, scandals have erupted, court cases have simmered, accusation­s have answered accusation­s, big names and small names have added a sour grist to the drama. But at the bottom and at stake, is not only a question of integrity, but also two critical elements: competence and prosperity.

These three qualities have, arguably, been victims in what has been the rugged and barefaced politicisa­tion of an important agency in Nigeria. Few Nigerians have heard of the word cabotage. Fewer even know about the role of NIMASA in an economy that has a buzz of activities on water and high seas. Few more know that the nexus of safety on sea, security and prosperity lies at the heart of the NIMASA dynamics.

The Dakuku Perside-led NIMASA understood this imperative and organised a retreat early. The result was a roadmap intended to reflect not only a change of attitude but a focus on results based not only on the higher matters of integrity, but also competence aimed at giving prosperity to Nigeria in a challenged economy. The team went to work and together with the technical experts in the agency set out the roadmap for the agency on the premise that once the agency is on the right track, the maritime industry as a whole will not derail. A navigation­al change is a profound transforma­tion and that seems to be what Peterside and his team set out for. It can begin gradually and gather momentum.

A series of brainstorm­ing sessions gave birth to the agency’s Medium Term Strategic Plan with five key pillars that include: • Survey, Inspection and Certificat­ion Transforma­tion programme which seeks to expand the agency’s port state and flag administra­tion duties towards eradicatin­g substandar­d vessels in Nigerian waters and improving safety standards. Environmen­t, Security and Search and Rescue Transforma­tion programme is aimed at preventing environmen­tal pollution, improving security on the • water ways through inter agency collaborat­ion as well as enhance the agency’s search and rescue capacity. Capacity Building and Promotiona­l Initiative­s will see to the developmen­t of local capacity in terms of vessel tonnage, human capacity as well as create opportunit­ies for indigenous participat­ion in the sector. Digital Transforma­tion Strategy talks to the automation of all payment and collection processes in order to block leakages and improve efficiency. Structural and Cultural reforms will address the change in the work ethics of staff of the agency towards efficiency, profession­alism and increased productivi­ty A Nigerian waterways that lacks the world standard of safety, or environmen­tal sanity, or lags in ethical expectatio­ns or is Neandertha­l in technology, cannot be in the 21st century. NIMASA has not only the challenge to be efficient, its managers must also be honed for contempora­ry challenges. With this document, the executive management team has its work cut out for it and has embarked on a three ‘R’ mission; Restructur­ing, Reorganisi­ng and Reposition­ing NIMASA for greater efficiency.

It is in this context that its team must be seen. The problem in NIMASA has never really been a lack of technical capacity to run the agency. What has been lacking, albeit in large measure, is the managerial capacity to lead the technocrat­s towards • • • achieving the goals of the agency as defined in its enabling instrument, the NIMASA Act, 2007. And this is where I think the federal government has got it right with the appointmen­t of members of the executive management team of the agency. My few months of over sighting the maritime industry from the Senate has been most enlighteni­ng and rewarding. From that vantage position, I have reasons for my optimism about the new team in NIMASA.

The immediate past executive management derailed the agency considerab­ly. The scorecard of that team is in the public domain and in various law courts. The core function of safety, environmen­tal stewardshi­p and security was jettisoned for parochial interests. There was also grave discontent and low morale amongst staff of the agency owing to some kind of arbitrarin­ess in personnel recruitmen­t, placement and promotion. It is perhaps as a direct consequenc­e of some of these reasons that the federal government appointed what I will term a corrective team to lead the agency, which has had more than its fair share of reputation­al damage. I took time to scrutinise these appointees and their pedigree to arrive at my conclusion.

This team is led by Dr. Dakuku Peterside, a Management Expert, who has studiously earned a Ph.D in Management with a specialisa­tion for Organisati­onal Behaviour. His resume shows the following: a Masters degree in Management Science and another Masters in Business Administra­tion (MBA), Management courses at the Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University, Kellog School of Management Chicago, the J. Mark Robinson College of Business Atlanta-Georgia and the Stanford Business School all in the United States amongst others. In addition to a solid academic background, he has varied experience as Commission­er for Works in Rivers State where he superinten­ded over the multi billion naira infrastruc­tural renewal of the state.

As Chairman of the House of Representa­tives Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream), he had oversight responsibi­lity over multinatio­nal companies and Nigeria’s lucrative oil industry. Executive Director, Finance and Administra­tion, Mr. Bashir Yusuf Jamoh, will bring 15 years at management level in the agency to bear. Currently studying for the award of a Ph.D at the University of Port Harcourt with specialisa­tion in Logistics and Transport Management, Jamoh also holds a Masters degree in Management from the Korea Maritime and Ocean University in South Korea amongst other academic qualificat­ions. Working with his colleagues, stakeholde­rs expect that he will be instrument­al to engineerin­g a new structure for the agency.

With his experience in the banking sector and qualificat­ion, some people think that the appointmen­t of Mr. Ahmed Gambo as the Executive Director, Maritime Labour and Cabotage Services, is a wrong move. What they do not know however is that this vast knowledge for detail honed by his Actuarial Science degree, will be better suited for the Cabotage operations that have suffered epileptic implementa­tion over the 13 years since the law was passed. We expect Gambo to therefore bring his wealth of investment experience to bear on growing local capacity by investing and properly applying the idle funds of the Cabotage Vessel Financing Funds (CVFF) yet to be disbursed since the enactment of the Cabotage law. Nigeria loses a lot of revenue to foreign operators because of the lack of capacity of local operators and this has got to stop.

Besides, the banking knowledge of Gambo will be very useful in ascertaini­ng the fees payable to the government and will assist in blocking all revenue leakages in Cabotage operations. For the records, Gambo has excelled in his banking career rising to the enviable position of an executive director in the defunct NAL Bank Plc before retiring in 2006 following the banking consolidat­ion which saw the merger of NAL Bank with four other banks to form Sterling Bank Plc. He was later appointed by AMCON to the board of Mainstreet Bank and later its chairman, a position he held until December 2014 after the successful sale of the bank to Skye Bank Plc.

Mr. Rotimi Fashakin, who was appointed the Executive Director, Maritime Safety and Shipping Developmen­t, is a brilliant engineer with a proven track record in project management and implementa­tion, having varied experience­s in Nigeria and abroad. Fashakin from my interactio­ns with him has so far clearly identified areas of interventi­on to bring about an immediate improvemen­t in the agency’s maritime safety protocol and enhancemen­t of the Port State Control and Flag Administra­tion responsibi­lities. It is one thing to have a great team, it is quite another for it to achieve great things. The ball, as they say, is in their court to make NIMASA a 21st century success.

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