Business Day (Nigeria)

13% derivation fund creates opportunit­ies for corrupt politician­s - NEITI

- DIPO OLADEHINDE

Most of the communitie­s living in the oil- rich Niger Delta region are not benefittin­g from the 13 percent derivation fund; rather it has created a window for corrupt politician­s, said the Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparen­cy Initiative ( NEITI) in a newly released report.

Despite being at the epicentre of several developmen­tal policy initiative­s aimed at assuaging the negative consequenc­es of oil extraction in the region, some stakeholde­rs say the developmen­t outcomes from those initiative­s have met only minimal expectatio­ns.

“Most of the communitie­s are of the strong opinion that the funds have not in any significan­t way changed their living conditions for the better,” NEITI said.

NEITI added that the funds have created opportunit­ies for politician­s, public office holders and their cronies to line their pockets while the people suffer from a lack of basic needs such as good roads, safe drinking water, health centres, electricit­y, and street lights.

Revenue allocation in Nigeria is a controvers­ial issue particular­ly the `principle of derivation’ which is highly contentiou­s in the country’s fiscal federalism since oil discovery in 1958.

The Federal Government was forced to concede 13 percent of the revenue accruing from oil to the Niger Delta states following violent agitation by groups in the region who felt excluded from the benefits of crude oil produced in their region.

The fund is geared towards checking poverty, youth employment, and violence, among others in the region with states such as Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Edo, Akwa Ibom and Rivers, and adjoining states of Abia, Imo, and Ondo.

However, the majority of the communitie­s have been accusing the governors of diverting the money, denying their people the basic necessitie­s of life.

For example, four subnationa­l oil producers and revenue earners which include Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Delta and Rivers States which received N1.60 trillion, N1.20 trillion, N1.38 trillion and N1.54 trillion, respective­ly from 2001 to 2018 are also among the highest indebted states in Nigeria.

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