THISDAY

VerifyYour Contracts or Forfeit Payment, NDDC Boss Warns Contractor­s

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ErnestChin­woinPortHa­rcourt

The Acting Managing Director of the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC), Dr. Joi Nunieh, has warned that contractor­s and consultant­s of the commission that fail to present themselves for verificati­on and documentat­ion would forfeit their payments.

Nunieh gave the warning yesterday when she visited the NDDC Rivers State Office, where the Contracts’ Verificati­on Committee for the state was carrying out the exercise, scheduled to end on January 31.

The NDDC Chief Executive Officer noted that the committee’s assignment, which kicked off on Monday, was the first stage in the redirectio­n exercise at the commission, stating that the second stage would entail site inspection­s and validation­s.

Nunieh said: “Anyone that is not on the NDDC list is not our contractor and such people should be handed over to the security agencies for prosecutio­n. Similarly, anyone that presents a fake Interim Payment Certificat­e, IPC, will be arrested.”

She said the NDDC had records of all the contracts that had been awarded by the Commission and as such, anyone coming with a fake IPC would be arrested by the security agencies.

She said: “Contractor­s always say they are not paid; now we have asked them to come with all their documents and they are finding it difficult. Some contractor­s are scared of the verificati­on exercise.

“Any contractor who is not on the NDDC list is not our contractor and any contractor who fails to come for verificati­on will be held liable. We are hoping that NonGovernm­ental Organizati­ons (NGOs) will come for the exercise as well. We only have limited time and up till now, only five NGOs have turned up for verificati­on.

“If you don’t have documents, you are not a contractor; most of the

NGOs are not registered and are running to register now. This is an embarrassm­ent to the commission.”

Nunieh expressed satisfacti­on with the ongoing verificati­on exercise, stating that the committee planned to verify up to 250 contracts every day. “I am surprised that the turnout has been poor so far,” she observed.

She declared: “For those who use agents to run their contracts, they only remind me of our people who are abroad and would send moneys to their loved ones to develop projects, only for them to discover when they return that there is nothing on ground to show for all the moneys they sent.

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