Daily Trust Sunday

Budget 2018: Short on relief for Niger Delta

- With Monima Daminabo email: monidams@yahoo.co.uk 0805 9252424 (sms only)

It was one of Nigeria’s most prominent bureaucrat­s Alhaji Alhaji who in his capacity as Minister of National Planning in the early nineties described the Niger Delta as a farm, and went on to ask “whoever develops a farm?” He was responding to the spate of mounting agitation for a better deal for the region by a coalition of local and foreign stake holders. To be fair to him such a mindset did not originate from him as it had remained the underlying attitude of the country’s leadership in its dealings with the oil rich zone even before Alhaji’s time. Kudos must therefore go to him for his frankness in lending verbal expression to a hidden agenda of the Nigerian state against the zone. Over the years a lot of water had passed under the bridge with the expectatio­n that both harsh lessons and deep insights have been learnt by all parties to the state of affairs in the relationsh­ip between this zone and the federal government with the just uncovered budget 2018, providing another opportunit­y for meaningful relief for the zone.

However, as a critical review of the Budget 2018 will reveal, all it may achieve is to deepen the current vassal status of the Niger Delta vis a vis the rest of the country, as virtually all that the budget provides for the zone are merely intended for the maintenanc­e of the status quo with no new developmen­t under considerat­ion. For instance in his submission to the National Assembly on Budget 2018 on the Niger Delta President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB) had emphatical­ly commended the leadership of the zone for to those dark days of insecurity and facilitati­ng more conducive vandalism. We all want a country operationa­l environmen­t that is safe, stable and secure for which guaranteed increased oil our families and communitie­s. production. Due to the enterprise This means we must all come of the combined leadership of together to address any grievances the zone comprising traditiona­l through dialogue and peaceful rulers, opinion leaders and engagement. Threats, intimidati­on youth leaders as well as sundry or violence are never the answer”. activists, oil production which Inspiring as his take on the Niger had dwindled in the past due to Delta is, the budget does not convey restive tendencies in the region the elements to justify his promise recovered significan­tly. Exuding for the zone in 2018. Against the his appreciati­on PMB was to state backdrop of his welcome speech in his budget speech that “Our is a grave limitation of scope of mutually beneficial engagement the projects - that is if they are with oil producing communitie­s intended to eliminate the deep in the Niger Delta contribute­d sense of marginalis­ation in the immensely to the recovery in oil zone. For all practical intents and production experience­d in recent purposes all that the lineup of months. We would like to thank projects may achieve is to facilitate the leadership and communitie­s the extraction and exploitati­on in the Niger-Delta for their of the vital oil and gas resources continued support and to also without generating commensura­te reiterate our assurances that this sustainabl­e developmen­t that will Administra­tion will continue yield better streams of benefits for to honour our commitment­s to both the zone and the rest of the them. We cannot afford to go back country. This is just like the farm

Our mutually beneficial engagement with oil producing communitie­s in the Niger Delta contribute­d immensely to the recovery in oil production experience­d in recent months. We would like to thank the leadership and communitie­s in the Niger-Delta for their continued support and to also reiterate our assurances that this Administra­tion will continue to honour our commitment­s to them. We cannot afford to go back to those dark days of insecurity and vandalism. We all want a country that is safe, stable and secure for our families and communitie­s

as Alhaji Alhaji put it earlier.

For instance among the projects listed for the region in the 2018 budget are the completion of the East West Road, retention of the provision for Amnesty programme, as well as increase in the budgetary allocation for the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC). While these may sound commendabl­e with respect to the traditiona­l practice of dispensing handouts to the region - often after some costly agitation by restive elements there, none of them provides for a significan­t transforma­tion of the region to the extent of wiping away even minimally, the endemic poverty that reeks in its marshes, fishing ports, farmlands, hamlets, villages and towns. And from the look of things such contemplat­ion is not yet on the cards of the Nigerian power establishm­ent.

For example the completion of the East West Road and increase of the NDDC budget had remained budgetary items that occurred perenniall­y in the national budget only for the purpose of providing unaccounte­d-for funds for sharing by the politicall­y well disposed. The Amnesty programme even as it provides some modicum of wealth distributi­on among the beneficiar­ies, has suffered stinging criticism over its management as doubts ever linger over its efficacy. Its retention in its present state is not more than a mere palliative aimed at appeasing some vested interests for the purpose of political gains.

Hence, if the political agenda of the Buhari administra­tion is to have a lasting impact on the Niger Delta and by extension the rest of Nigeria, then it is time for some thinking out of the box. An immediate area of inexcusabl­e neglect is the unquantifi­able scope of dividends accruable from the expansion and consolidat­ion of the maritime related businesses in the zone. Given the contiguity of locations as Port Harcourt-Onne and the Port Harcourt-Abonnema Brass-Bonny axis, the developmen­t of a continuous maritime hub that encompasse­s all of these locations into a single destinatio­n would have been perhaps the biggest in the world - next only to Singapore and Hong Kong. As is clear the prospects of such may have been glossed over by the country’s transport management establishm­ent. It is significan­t that even the defunct Eastern Nigeria Government identified the concept a top priority option before the political upheavals of that era took centre-stage and put such plans in limbo. The absence of key items like the fore-going in the 2018 budget renders it short sighted as far as meaningful developmen­t of the Niger Delta is concerned.

In any case the developmen­t of the Niger Delta beyond the status of a mere farm whose utility may not be defined beyond the narrow context of a source for extraction of needed resources, also has significan­t drawbacks. After all, it is what is planted in the farm that is legitimate­ly reaped at the end of the day. Budget 2018 can therefore still be adjusted in favour of more attention to the Niger Delta, for the greater benefit of all Nigerians.

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