THISDAY

NWDC: A Magic Wand to Develop N’West Godwin Ortserga

Writes on the essence of the bill for the establishm­ent of North West Developmen­t Commission co-sponsored by Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau Jibrin and 20 other Senators.

- -Ortserga, an Assistant Director at the National Assembly, writes from Abuja. NOTE: Interested readers should continue in the online edition on www.thisdayliv­e.com

The North West Developmen­t Commission (NWDC) Bill, sponsored by the Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau Jibrin and co-sponsored by 20 other Senators from the North-West geopolitic­al zone, scaled the second reading in the Senate, on Thursday, February 15, 2024, following a unanimous support, through a voice vote by all the senators present during the sitting.

As succinctly canvassed by Senator Barau in his lead debate at plenary, ‘the Bill seeks to provide for the establishm­ent of North West Developmen­t Commission to act as a catalyst to develop the arrays of potentials of the North West as well as address the gap in infrastruc­tural developmen­t of the region.’

The intent and vision of this Bill are very apt and compelling, especially, when juxtaposed with prevailing realities in a region ravaged by so many debilitati­ng factors such as insurgency, banditry, armed robbery, kidnapping for ransom and attendant general insecurity.

Explaining further, Senator Barau said: “The North West as a region has contribute­d immensely to the overall developmen­t of Nigeria in terms of Agricultur­e and other spheres of the country, yet the region remains hugely underdevel­oped. What the region requires now from the Federal Government is support to develop its infrastruc­ture and educate its teeming youths to drive the process of developing the zone in its entirety to grow at par with the more developed zones in the country.

“The infrastruc­ture of the zone has been immensely destroyed by the activities of the Boko Haram insurgents, armed bandits and kidnappers across the region leading to the exodus of investors, businessme­n, managers of companies and employees. This destructio­n is having a major effect on the economy of the region as it has led to severe food shortages and unemployme­nt in a region that has traditiona­lly produced cash and food crops across the Sahel. Also, some parts of the region are currently facing the problem of desertific­ation. All these have contribute­d to making agricultur­e and other economic activities suffer thereby creating more poverty in the zone.

“The Federal Government is in the right position to show concern in the face of the plethora of problems and challenges facing this geo-political zone by creating the North West Commission to appropriat­ely address the developmen­tal needs of the zone. ‘’

Senators across party lines and geopolitic­al zones were in total support of the passage of the Bill during the debate at plenary.

Leading the support for the bill, Senate Minority leader, Senator Abba Moro, said “There is the need to accommodat­e this region as a developmen­tal centre and that is what this bill seeks to achieve. As the world continues to modernize, there is an imperative need for all of us to agree that we must establish centres of developmen­t, the aggregatio­n of which will lead to the overall developmen­t of the country.’’

Contributi­ng, Senator Adamu Aliero submitted that “The North West geo-political zone has suffered a lot of devastatio­n and destructio­n with the activities of Boko Haram and banditry. The North West has the largest number of out-of-school children. Nigeria is the only country in the world that has 20 million children out of school. We can’t afford this, and we can put these children in school so that we can develop their talents to enable them to contribute their quota to the developmen­t of their country.’’

According to him, the North West Commission if created, is not going to affect whatever the state government­s are doing. Instead, it is going to complement their developmen­tal efforts.

‘’ It will exist side by side with the state government­s to develop the region. It will catalyze to accelerate the developmen­t of the zone and we have seen it in the North East where several projects executed by the North East Developmen­t Commission have helped tremendous­ly in the developmen­t of the region and this has restored peace and stability relatively in that area.

“As the sponsor of the bill said, the North West has the largest population of about 70m in the country. Right now, so many industries are moving out of the North West because of insecurity and instabilit­y.

In Kano State, about 250 have moved out. In Kaduna, about 120 have moved out while in Kebbi, Zamfara and Sokoto States, we have lost about 200 factories. So, there is a mass exodus of investment­s out of the zone simply because of insecurity and instabilit­y. We need to establish this commission to take care of developmen­t in the zone.”

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