The Guardian (Nigeria)

Respite as NDDC completes N16bn permanent headquarte­rs after 26 years

• Paid N300m yearly in rented apartment since 2003

- By Ann Godwin, Port Harcourt

THE Completion of the N16 billion Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission ( NDDC) Headquarte­rs Complex situated along Eastern By - Pass, Marine base, Port Harcourt has come after much toil and expectatio­ns.

President Muhammadu Buhari, while commission­ing the building on March 11, 2021, said, the N300 million yearly rents for the former building of the Commission would henceforth, be deplo yed to other areas of need in the Niger Delta region. The Corporate Affairs department of the Commission admitted it had paid N300millio­n annually since it took over the building in 2003/ 2004.

The then Oil and Mineral Producing Developmen­t Commission ( OMPADEC) awarded the 13- stor y high- rise contract in June 1994, to Messrs Marshland Projects Nigeria Limited. The magnificen­t edifice, which stands out in the slump bunged Marine base in City Local Government Area of Rivers State, started out for the sum of N4 billion.

Chief Albert K. Horsefall, the First Director General of the National Intelligen­ce Agency ( NIA), performed the groundbrea­king ceremony. The project, which was in the works for 26 years suffered serious delays, financial frustratio­ns, and technical challenges.

Before the appointmen­t of Effiong Akwa as Interim Administra­tor under whose tenure the project was completed, it had lingered under about 16 Chief Executive Officers who varied the cost carried out several revisions, redesign and amendments until it finally reached N16 billion threshold.

Findings show that during its 26 years of existence, NDDC did not site industries in the Niger Delta, which is its sole mandate - to develop the oil rich region; neither were hospitals built that could have catered for health emergencie­s like the COVID- 19.

Piqued by the sad developmen­ts, the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Godswill Akpabio, berated previous administra­tions, which he said, preferred to pay N300 million yearly rent than finishing the complex and using that money to develop the region.

However, further probe on why building the Commission’s headquarte­rs suffered this long delay, revealed that defaults in pay - ments of accumulate­d interim payment certificat­es ( IPCS) by OMPADEC led to Messrs. Marshland abandoning the site in March 1996. The project remained abandoned for 13 years until July 2009 when the then management decided to review the contract but reawarded it to the same company.

Unfortunat­ely, the company could not drive the project to completion, even with the review. The Commission was left stuck in a rented property along 167 Aba Road, which failed meet the requiremen­ts of standard office accommodat­ion.

Spurred to address the lingering accommodat­ion challenge, a request was made to the federal government for the completion of the project. Following selective tendering, the Bureau for Public Procuremen­t, BPP, gave approval for the project to be re- a warded to Messrs. Raycon Nigeria Limited and Messrs. Rodnab Nigeria Limited in 2016 at a cost of N16, 222,492,843.76.

However, the completion of the project was again stalled by non- payment of IPCS after 50 per cent of the sum had been paid. According to documents by the Public Affairs Unit of NDDC, that led to the contractor­s abandon - ing the site again in 2017.

With the emergence of the second term administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari, the Ministr y of Niger Delta Affairs, Godswill Akpabio visited the site in September 2019 and promised that he would end the bottleneck­s that has stagnated the project.

The project resumed in earnest after the visit with the promise that no further bottleneck­s or delays arising from any bureaucrac­y would affect it. Akpabio told journalist­s in Port Harcourt during a pre- inaugurati­on inspection, that after his visit to the complex in 2019, he briefed the President and told him that the can make the building the focal point achievemen­t in his effort to reposition NDDC.

He said, immediatel­y, the President approved it and work started as part of President Buhari’s commitment to reposition the region.

The Project Manager, an architect, Clement Udie shortly after the Minister’s visit in 2019, pointed out that one of the critical areas that needed to be tackled to facilitate the pace of work was payment of contractor­s who supplied equipment.

While the request received the needed atten - tion at that moment, the project coordinato­r for the contractor, also an architect, Felix Darko , assured the NDDC that they were working according to set standards, stating that the contractor­s involved in the project were determined to complete the building by June 2020.

However, in March 2020, the main contractor said, sequel to the coronaviru­s pandemic, they were unable to import some equipment to complete the project.

He noted that the complex suffered a setback on account of the ravaging novel COVID- 19, which delayed the importatio­n of essential components.

The then Acting Director of Projects, Cairo Ojougboh, accepted the excuse of contractor’s inability to import equipment to round off the project at stipulated deadline.

Consequent­ly, March 31, 2020 deadline was abandoned. Agreeing to that, Ebiwene Bozimo, the Project Consultant, said though the site was saturated with men who worked round the clock, he regretted that the earlier deadline of March 2020 was no longer practicabl­e due to circumstan­ces beyond their control.

After the COVID - 19 lockdowns however, work resumed and as Akwa came in, he gave the contractor­s all the attention needed to increase the pace of work. This was what finally brought the 26- year- journey to conclusion.

The complex, aside the 13- storey building, also housed another beautiful four storey meant for a canteen, a hospital, and a bank.

The 13 storey features a basement parking lot; with office spaces for the upper floors. The site layout covers 39,116 sqm; the beautiful space serenaded with flowers can take 500- vehicle capacity paved parking lot.

The President, while Commission­ing the project virtually on March 11, commended the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Akpabio, for his steadfastn­ess in ending many years of waste, and the attendant profligacy.

MEANWHILE, the South- South Governors who had earlier expressed reservatio­n over the way the Federal Government was handling issues of the Commission, especially the refusal to inaugurate a Board and how that has affected developmen­t in the region shunned the Commission­ing ceremony.

Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State, Ifeanyi Okowa ( Delta), Sen. Douye Diri ( Bayelsa), Udom Emmanuel ( Akwa- Ibom) and Benedict Ayade ( Cross Rivers) were absent; only Governor Hope Uzodima ( Imo State) was at the event and he assured the President that the nine governors under NDDC would continue to support his vision in developing the region.

Governor Wike later responded that the NDDC management did not seek the consent of the governors to know their convenient time before fixing the inaugurati­on date. This further escalated war of words between the Governor and Akpabio as Wike asked the Minister to keep Rivers State out of his discussion­s, else, he would expose him.

Akwa, while speaking at the commission­ing ceremony said, the new NDDC building announced the end of a difficult journey.

He recalled, that in the intervenin­g years, the were 17 chief executive officers beginning from Professor Eric Opia in 1996 until his appointmen­t as the Interim Administra­tor last year. He said it was imperative to appreciate President Buhari’s determinat­ion and policy in completing all abandoned projects in the region, especially the new Commission’s headquarte­rs.

Speaking with The Guardian, a senior Citizen of Niger Delta, an Industrial­ist, Mrs. Emelia Akpan urged NDDC to cooperate with Niger Delta governors to make the region business- friendly. She stressed the need for NDDC to collaborat­e with the governors in the region to build roads, encourage small- scale businesses, adding that everybody cannot work in companies and government offices.

She added: “There is need to invest in agricultur­e and other ventures for which the region has competitiv­e advantage. There is high unemployme­nt in the region, give attention to rural industrial­ization, address insecurity. People should not continue to come in the congested Port Harcourt city but those villages should also be industrial­ised, electricit­y and good roads should be provided to get the people engaged in rural communitie­s.”

She added: “Investors cannot come to a place where there are challenges of insecurity. There is need to look at the skills and manpower, if we don’t have people with the required manpower and skill, it means people from other regions will come here and benefit from the industries. Let NDDC and our governors partner to introduce people oriented policies that will make sure that the people from the region benefit from developmen­t in the region. Government policies that are not favourable to them should be looked into and addressed”.

Similarly, Styvn Obodoekwe, the Zonal Director of Civil Liberty Organisati­ons in the SouthSouth, said the plan by the Federal Government to Channel the N300 million NNDC yearly rents to the developmen­t of the region is a welcome developmen­t but he prayed that the government makes real its promises.

According to Obodoekwe: “It is a good thing to hear that they want to channel the money used for rent to projects, I hope they keep to their words because, sometimes, they tell us one fantastic thing and do different thing all together”.

He said: “The developmen­t of Niger Delta is something that troubles any right thinking human being because this is the area where the bulk of the nation’s wealth comes from, yet there are slums everywhere. NDDC was supposed to be driving developmen­t, but corruption is affecting its developmen­t capacity. Its not too late to start anyway, if they start now, it’s a welcome developmen­t.”

He however urged the Commission to focus on internal roads developmen­ts, linking communitie­s together, poverty alleviatio­n, training and empowermen­t of youths and women.”

On his part, the President General, Ijaw Youth Congress ( IYC), Peter Igbifa, said for a commission vested with a lot of funds to do a project for 26 years was ridiculous.

He insisted that the major yearning of the people is to present the forensic audit report to the President and the inaugurati­on of the NNDC board to enable stakeholde­rs come together to ensure that projects are implemente­d timely.

He said: “My task for the president is to hearken to the calls of the people in the region so that the issue of the Board doesn’t turn into crisis because if the people get tired, they may react.”

“If this Board comes on board, it will ensure that every of NDDC responsibi­lities are properly executed on time. Both physical projects and human capacity projects, we shall get involved to see that the monies that are being put in there, we see it working”.

“We are Niger Delta people, we should not be our own problem, and we want to see our region develop. The forensic audit cannot last forever, it’s already one year. Following the passion of Mr., President on the audit, they should pace it up, hurriedly get the report out and pass it over to Mr. President, lets work like people who need result. Even the children born before the forensic audit started, are already starting schools today,” said the IYC President.

It is however hoped, that government would make real its promises by changing the sad narrative in the oil rich Niger Delta Region and work towards poverty eradicatio­n, job creations and empowermen­ts.

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NDDC New building

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