THISDAY

NDDC Audit Report, Scaremonge­rs and Rabble-rousers

- Akpandem James t +BNFT B DPNNVOJDBU­JPO DPOTVMUBOU MJWFT JO "CVKB

Afamiliar drama is again playing out across the country since the completion and submission of the report of the forensic auditing of the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC). The theme as usual is based on the theories of two fallacies - Ad hominem and Straw-man. The cast is made up of the routine mercantili­sts who come in the mould of civil society organisati­ons, youth groups, socio-cultural organisati­ons, media hirelings and influencer­s. The script often leaves out the critical issue of the moment and dwells rather on tangential matters. The plot is to distract attention and help rogues escape public scrutiny.

The reason the Niger Delta region has remained underdevel­oped till today in spite of the huge resources pumped into the area by the various government­s, interventi­on agencies, internatio­nal oil corporatio­ns, oil services companies, developmen­t partners, global foundation­s, other corporate entities, wealthy individual­s and community developmen­t efforts etc., is simply because the people are more inclined towards defending selfish and parochial indulgence­s than insisting on fundamenta­l growth and developmen­t.

The region receives arguably the highest amount of funds in the country from several sources, but it has very little to show in terms of developmen­t. Players often mouth the difficult terrain as reason why the huge amounts allocated to the region does not manifest in physical reality on ground. As partially true as that may be, it is often used as a cover up for the massive fraud that has become customary, perpetrate­d at all levels of governance - from the individual community level to the highest level of government.

Truth be told, the state of the region today is a direct consequenc­e of deliberate mismanagem­ent and mindless plundering of resources by the various actors. It has little to do with the difficult terrain often being blamed, given the amount involved. After all, most tourism resorts across the world are built on very difficult terrains, with lesser resources. Unfortunat­ely the NDDC that was set-up as an interventi­on agency for the region to be managed by indigenes became a corporate automated teller machine (ATM) for those with access to the password.

The Niger Delta is one region that has various layers of “government­s”; each with its own authority driven by vested interests. It parades the largest number of interest groups whose focus is self than community; a region where the youths lead and elders play along. Both are more interested in primitive acquisitio­n of personal wealth than the developmen­t of their communitie­s. The region harbours the highest number of civil society groups whose interests are more pecuniary than civil challenges. Politician­s are more interested in what is going on in the NDDC than in their respective constituen­cies and states. For a good chunk, politics is their occupation and contract is their goal. Supervisio­n and investigat­ion are hardly tolerated.

No meaningful developmen­t can take place in an environmen­t where every move is driven by threats, protests, lockdowns and vandalism; where corporate blackmail has been elevated to an art. Even state governors in the region operate at the mercy of these tendencies. Only those who also wear the violent and stubborn toga operate with some level of authority. With these pack of tendentiou­s elements all training their eyes on resources accruing to the region, visible community or regional developmen­t would be a miracle.

It was expected that with the submission of the NDDC audit report some interest groups will be jolted; and as is customary, would be up in arms looking for a fall guy and a means of escape. Campaign of calumny and blackmail is usually the first weapon. It has become a familiar trend.

Unfortunat­ely, this unbecoming developmen­t is given impetus by the people of the region who not only willingly allow themselves to be used, but get easily distracted by the scheming of their plunderers. They leave the issue at stake and focus on personalit­ies who, in most cases, may just be tangential to the issue in focus. The dress rehearsal for that familiar drama is already on; a flurry of the main stage play is expected in the coming weeks as the Attorney General, Abubakar Malami, moves to interrogat­e issues involved in the report.

Luckily the report got in while the National Assembly is still on vacation, otherwise we would by now be witnessing a wave of invitation­s of some critical players in the exercise, including the Minister of Finance to brief members on how the fees were paid to the auditors; the Niger Delta Minister to explain how the amount was computed; the lead auditors to explain how they arrived at their conclusion­s, and the Attorney General to explain why he received the report instead of the President. This would have been on till the federal budget is submitted in September. Work on the budget would be suspended until the Presidency explains why the forensic audit was instituted and why the Niger Delta Minister should not be sacked for allowing people who were elected to make laws to become contractor­s. Mercifully they are on break and Malami has this grace period to hasten up.

But the issue here looks quite straight forward if the people of the region and indeed Nigerians are really interested in accountabi­lity and developmen­t. The report indicates that between 2001 and 2019, the Federal Government approved N3,375,735,776,794.93 as budgetary allocation and N2, 420,948.894,191.00 as income from Statutory and Non-statutory sources to the NDDC. That brings the total to approximat­ely N6 trillion. The report also indicates that there is on record 13,777 projects, the execution of which is “substantia­lly compromise­d”. The NDDC operates 362 bank accounts and lack proper reconcilia­tion. These are the critical issues that should interest the people. They should be interested in the veracity and the reality of these presentati­ons. How come the area is still a stretch of mangrove belt after all this? Who are those behind the state of affairs? What happens next?

Of course Malami gave the major reasons for the audit exercise, one of which is to address the challenges militating against the delivery of the mandate of the NDDC to the people of the region. The other is to ensure probity and accountabi­lity in the use of public funds. The motive seems laudable, which is why it is highly disappoint­ing to see those who should look forward to the fervent interrogat­ion and implementa­tion of the report from the exercise resorting to primitive sentiments and blackmail of the drivers.

For instance, one of the most ardent critics of the Buhari administra­tion and supposed campaigner against the marginalis­ation of the Niger Delta region commented on one of the WhatsApp platforms: “My question is, why the concentrat­ion on NDDC investigat­ion when North East Developmen­t Commission which is also enmeshed in corruption is not investigat­ed”. She saw the exercise as political blackmail.

Responding to the post, a liberal commentato­r said: “My own question instead, chopping and burying the bones from the meal cannot go on forever. If forensic audit finally berths through selective abuse of political privilege, it is well. It sets precedent for the future. Before now, share, chop and clean mouth was the only unwritten rule”.

Incidental­ly both are from the Niger Delta region, with two perspectiv­es. Unfortunat­ely the former is the dominant mindset of a typical Niger Deltan who sees nothing wrong with what her people are doing so long as others are also perceived as guilty. And this is the mindset that always allows scoundrels to get away with their kill. Ironically, they are the ones who complain the most about how things are not working in the country. All their bile is directed at the centre.

Already a number of persons and groups are lined up to skin and dry the Niger Delta Minister, Senator Godswill Akpabio who is seen as the arrowhead of the forensic exercise. They are bent on exhuming all the debris about and against the man just to either distract attention or rubbish the report; but this is not about Akpabio, it is about the future and developmen­t of the region. In the first place, Akpabio did not instigate the probe, the governors of the region did.

During a visit to President Muhammadu Buhari, they asked that janitors be sent to clean up the cesspit known as the NDDC. The governors cried out that their people were suffocatin­g from the putrid fumes generated by the massive plunder in the establishm­ent.

In setting up the probe, the President was only responding to a request by one of the most critical stakeholde­rs in the region. Akpabio, as head of the Ministry overseeing the NDDC, had a statutory responsibi­lity to drive the process. He had no choice. So an attack on his person from whichever quarter at this time, whether directly related with the exercise or not, is an attempt to give a dog a bad name just to hang it. The issue for now is the audit report, not the minister.

In today’s Nigeria where every normal probe is seen as a witch-hunt, those who believe that other establishm­ents should similarly be probed have a responsibi­lity to get the relevant stakeholde­rs to make a case for it, instead of wallowing in the self-righteous perception of selective antagonism. It might not be the best approach, but that is what we have reduced the country to. The plundering in the Niger Delta region has been on for too long. It is not in the overall interest of the people for it to continue. The people themselves must help in putting a stop to it.

Malami in his speech captured the scenario that “the welfare and socio-economic inclusion of the Niger Delta Region is paramount to the developmen­t and security of the region and by extension the country. Funds spent on developmen­t activities should as a consequenc­e promote political and socio-economic stability in the region. Citizens affected by these developmen­t projects should also exhibit the ability to contribute to the continuous progress of their immediate and wider communitie­s by engaging in constructi­ve activities that will sustain and support these developmen­ts”.

It is hoped that the Federal Government will walk the talk by applying the law to remedy the deficienci­es outlined in the report while immediatel­y commencing criminal investigat­ions, prosecutio­n and recovery of funds not properly utilised. It should also use relevant recommenda­tions in the report to reposition and restructur­e the NDDC for efficiency and better service delivery. The Federal Government says it will, without hesitation, strategica­lly implement all aspects of the audit exercise that will promote probity for the Niger Delta Region and Nigeria as a whole. The people are earnestly waiting.

Government must ward off every pressure and distractio­n from scaremonge­rs and rabble-rousers, under whatever guise, who might directly or indirectly want the report compromise­d in any form whatsoever.

In today’s Nigeria where every normal probe is seen as a witch-hunt, those who believe that other establishm­ents should similarly be probed have a responsibi­lity to get the relevant stakeholde­rs to make a case for it, instead of wallowing in the self-righteous perception of selective antagonism

 ??  ?? Niger Delta Minister, Senator Godswill Akpabio
Niger Delta Minister, Senator Godswill Akpabio
 ??  ?? AGF, Malami
AGF, Malami

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