THISDAY

THE WINDS OF CHANGE IN NDDC

The NDDC badly needs an overhaul

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THE PRESIDENT HAS SENT A LETTER TO THE SENATE REQUESTING FOR THE SCREENING AND CONFIRMATI­ON OF THE CHAIRMAN AND 15 OTHER MEMBERS OF THE BOARD. WE HOPE THE PROCESS WILL BE SPEEDILY DONE

In what many see as a move to restore a measure of sanity in the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC), President Muhammadu Buhari last week ordered a forensic audit of its operations. “I try to follow the act setting up the NDDC,” the President told the visiting governors of the oil-bearing region. “With the amount of money that the federal government has religiousl­y allocated to the NDDC, we will like to see the results on the ground.”

It is easy to see why the special interventi­onist agency needs some kind of reality check. Establishe­d in 2000 by the then President Olusegun Obasanjo administra­tion, the NDDC was charged with facilitati­ng the rapid, even and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Niger Delta into a region “that is economical­ly prosperous, socially stable, ecological­ly regenerati­ve and politicall­y peaceful.” The commission’s mandate area is comprised of the nine oil producing states of Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Edo, Imo, Ondo, and Rivers. Sadly, while the NDDC has a comprehens­ive master plan and hundreds of billions of Naira have been spent over the past 16 years, there is little on ground to justify the investment. The dismal state of developmen­t in the Niger Delta was recently acknowledg­ed by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, when he said that there was little evidence to justify the huge contributi­on of the Niger Delta to the developmen­t of Nigeria. “The Niger Delta we see today is an area of poor infrastruc­ture; a few schools and hospitals. There are signboards of abandoned projects all over the place,” said Osinbajo who merely echoed what other stakeholde­rs have been saying. Indeed, the report of the presidenti­al committee on project execution covering between 2005 and 2011, was, to put it mildly, very unflatteri­ng. The report monitored a total of 609 projects spread across three states – Cross River, Edo and Rivers.

According to the committee chairman, Chief Isaac Jemide, of these 609 projects, 222 (36.5%) were completed, 102 (16.7%) were ongoing and 285 (46.8%) were abandoned at various levels of completion. Even worse, some of these projects were completely outside the statutory operationa­l scope of the NDDC. Similarly, a report from the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (NEITI) reveals that between 2007 and 2014, a whopping sum of N594 billion was remitted to NDDC, but could not account for how N7.4 billion allocated for grassroots developmen­t projects was spent, among others.

It is therefore little surprise that the presidenti­al directive on NDDC is being hailed from many quarters. Although the president rightly admitted that developing the Niger Delta area requires enormous resources, it is also evident that the money being ploughed to the region is not being judiciousl­y managed. And for that reason, the NDDC is in need of an overhaul. But in endorsing a probe of the NDDC, we are also careful to warn that it should not be an excuse for some politician­s, who themselves are not paragon of virtues, to derail having a substantiv­e board in place. An interim board without any clear mandate or authority is a recipe for unwholesom­e practices as we have seen over the years at the NDDC.

Yesterday, the president sent a letter to the Senate requesting for the screening and confirmati­on of the chairman and 15 other members of the board, to pilot the affairs of the NDDC, in line with the Act establishi­ng the commission. We hope the process of their confirmati­on and swearing in will be speedily done. This is important for entrenchin­g a culture of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in running the affairs of the commission. It is only in such an atmosphere that the agency can fulfil its mandate to facilitate the rapid and sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Niger Delta region.

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