THISDAY

In Pursuit of New Vision for Niger Delta

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Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinato­r of the Presidenti­al Amnesty Programme, Professor Charles Dokubo, is pursuing the federal government's ‘New Vision for Niger Delta’ initiative with ambition and determinat­ion. Ndubuisi Francis writes

A verificati­on exercise of delegates for educationa­l programmes ordered by Dokubo has helped uncover hundreds of students enrolled in universiti­es across the country on the ticket of the amnesty programme, but who are not known to the office, as they were not captured in the data base of beneficiar­ies of the initiative

Besides the task of rebooting the amnesty programme, the recent appointmen­t of Professor Charles Dokubo as Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinato­r of the Presidenti­al Amnesty Programme (PAP) was part of the overall effort by the President Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion to reassure the people of the oil-rich region of his commitment to the developmen­t of the area as encapsulat­ed in the “New Vision for Niger Delta” initiative.

One hundred days after taking over the mantle of leadership, having been appointed on March 13, 2018, Dokubo has pursued with uncommon vigour the assignment entrusted to him by the president – to give a new lease of life to and totally recalibrat­e the programme for ex-agitators.

Unlike some newly-appointed chief executives assuming such key offices, Dokubo did not enjoy the usual backslappi­ng and congratula­tory messages that ought to come with his announceme­nt as the PAP coordinato­r and special adviser to the president.

Past Grievances It is an unassailab­le truism that the amnesty initiative designed for former armed agitators in the Niger Delta, who had been demanding more control over the oil and gas resources of the region, but decided to turn their backs on armed struggle, has since 2010 helped in the sustenance of peace and conducive environmen­t for oil production, the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy. But the grumbles by the beneficiar­ies and other stakeholde­rs about how the programme was managed in the three years preceding Dokubo’s appointmen­t were causing apprehensi­on. There were fears of a possible relapse into restivenes­s that might upset the relative the peace and security in the region.

Some of the grievances range from lateness to outright failure to pay stipends to the enrolled ex-agitators, mismanagem­ent of mobilisati­on of beneficiar­ies for training, mismanagem­ent of funds, and inefficien­cy in the running of the operations of the Amnesty Office itself. The laxity and sometimes tardiness in the management of the programme also gave vent to speculatio­ns that the federal government might be planning to stop the programme.

Reassuranc­e Beyond the task of rebooting the Demobilisa­tion, Disarmamen­t and Reintegrat­ion and (DDR) programme, the appointmen­t of Dokubo was also part of steps by the Buhari government to reassure the people of the oil-producing region of its commitment to the programme in particular, and the developmen­t of the region in general as encapsulat­ed in the administra­tion’s “New Vision for Niger Delta.” With the huge burden of expectatio­ns from stakeholde­rs and the government at the back of his mind, the consummate researcher and university teacher had to roll up his sleeves and go to work from the word go. Although it is still early days, there is no doubt that Dokubo has succeeded in reigniting confidence in the programme among all stakeholde­rs in his first 100 days in office. He has also succeeded in laying and streamlini­ng structures and processes to address all the previous complaints and agitations about the management of the programme, especially from beneficiar­ies.

Working with the recommenda­tions of a committee he set up on assumption of office to help sieve through the haystack of problems militating against the programme, Dokubo has since activated sweeping reviews of all contracts awarded by his predecesso­r to enable him have a grasp of the financial assets and liabilitie­s.

Similarly, a thorough audit of all department­s and personnel in the office carried

out by the committee led to Dokubo’s engagement of a new lead reintegrat­ion consultant who subsequent­ly superinten­ded a reappraisa­l of the personnel and their deployment to relevant department­s at the Amnesty Office.

Rejig

Based on the recommenda­tions of the Programme Review Committee, he carried out the rejigging of all on-going vocational, educationa­l and post-training empowermen­t programmes of the Amnesty Office in the country and offshore in the past 100 days. A verificati­on exercise of delegates for educationa­l programmes ordered by Dokubo has helped uncover hundreds of students enrolled in universiti­es across the country on the ticket of the Amnesty Programme, but who are not known to the office, as they were not captured in the data base of beneficiar­ies of the initiative. It was also discovered that some universiti­es, apparently colluding with some corrupt personnel in the Education Unit, were engaged in rampant, unpatrioti­c act of inflation of fees to be paid for students by the Amnesty Office.

While investigat­ion into how the fraud was perpetrate­d under the previous managers of the programme is on-going, Dokubo had promised that rather than wholesale disowning of the students, he would work out ways to tackle the problems with the management of the institutio­ns involved.

Interface with Beneficiar­ies

About two weeks ago, Dokubo was in London to meet with the amnesty programme’s education delegates studying at universiti­es across the United Kingdom. The presidenti­al adviser used the opportunit­y of the meeting, which was attended by 47 delegates from 25 institutio­ns across the United Kingdom, to assure the students that they had not been abandoned. It was also an opportunit­y for the students to meet a coordinato­r of the programme for the first time in over three years.

At the interface, he encouraged and reassured the students of his commitment to their welfare and well-being. The students also took advantage of the forum to pour out their complaints, most of which centred around payment of their school fees, living expenses, opportunit­ies for post graduate studies, employment after graduation and the possibilit­y of getting back on the programme for those expelled for one reason or the other.

While Dokubo gave detailed answers to the questions, the most significan­t outcome of the meeting was no doubt, the unveiling of a new set of guidelines for the offshore education programme. The special adviser had set up a committee to draft new policies to guide and address some of the regular concerns of delegates for offshore education some weeks before the London event.

This was with the understand­ing that such set policies and procedures will help to streamline responses to such concerns and prevent abuses which have resulted in so much confusion and allegation­s of favouritis­m in the past.

The new policy guiding the offshore education programme which has already been adopted clearly stipulates conditions for the continuati­on or discontinu­ation of sponsorshi­p of beneficiar­ies, conditions for sponsorshi­p of students for second degree and guidelines for new offshore deployment of students, among others.

In his response to the various concerns of the students at the London Forum, the presidenti­al adviser relied on and quoted copiously from the new policy, thus ensuring that the delegates went away from the interactio­n with clear answers to many of the issues that have been of concern to them.

For stakeholde­rs, the interface with the students as well as the new draft policy was a fresh start for the offshore education component of the Amnesty Programme. But such redefiniti­on and engenderin­g of a more robust relationsh­ip between the amnesty office and the programme’s critical stakeholde­rs can also be said to be one of the key achievemen­ts of the coordinato­r in the past 100 days.

Parley On assumption of office, Dokubo had stated that engagement with stakeholde­rs would be key to his efforts in rebooting and regaining the confidence of critical stakeholde­rs in the amnesty programme. In actualisat­ion of this promise, the coordinato­r, even as he battled with finding solutions to the many challenges he inherited on assumption of office, had held fruitful engagement­s with all the critical stakeholde­rs across the programme’s spectrum in the past three months.

The first of such meeting was in Lagos where he met with the key leaders of ex-agitators enlisted in the first phase of the PAP. The very crucial meeting was for the “Big Five,” leaders of the ex-agitators who led thousands of Niger Delta ex-agitators to disarm and accept the offer of amnesty from the federal government in 2009.

The leaders included Chief Government Ekpomupolo (popularly known as Tompolo), King Michael Ateke Tom, Dr. Ebikabowei Victor-Ben (also known as Boyloaf), Hon. Farah Dagogo, and Chief Bibopre Ajube (Shoot-at-Sight). Tompolo and Tom were represente­d at the meeting. The Lagos meeting with the ‘Big Five' was the first of its kind in about five years and was therefore seen as an indication of their confidence in the new leadership at the amnesty office.

Dokubo followed up with meetings with leaders of phase two and three of the ex-agitators in Abuja as well as an enlarged meeting of larger stakeholde­rs in the Niger Delta in Lagos attended by key political actors, traditiona­l rulers, civil society groups, and academicia­ns, among others from the oil producing region.

The meetings were essentiall­y interactiv­e forums where the leaders of the ex- agitators tabled their various complaints against the way the amnesty programme was managed under the previous administra­tion, especially on issues relating to payment of stipends, training and empowermen­t opportunit­ies for ex-agitators and their leaders. While Dokubo did his best to answer the questions and allay their various concerns concerning the amnesty programme, he was also explicit in his explanatio­ns to the former agitators on the new direction he will pursuing in the spheres of education, vocational, post training engagement and job placement as the coordinato­r.

The presidenti­al aide also repeatedly assured the ex-agitators that he would do everything necessary to ensure that all aspects of the programme deliver the expected benefits for them and the Niger Delta in general.

The ex-agitators departed from the sessions confident that their concerns would be taken care of given that the amnesty programme is now being driven by a steady hand. The leaders of the exagitator­s who attended the stakeholde­rs’ meeting in Abuja and Lagos as well as other stakeholde­rs of the programme had in similar vein, been expressing their support for Dokubo’s efforts to turn around the amnesty programme.

The coordinato­r has also in the past 100 days, initiated concrete steps to actualise the promises of change he has been dishing out to the ex-agitators. To tackle the problem of delay in payment of students' allowances, for instance, the presidenti­al adviser had on assumption of office asked the onshore education unit to develop a sustainabl­e payment plan for the next two years.

He has also worked hard to ensure that stipends and other allowances are paid to ex-agitators, though such efforts have sometimes been hampered by the delay in the release of funds to the amnesty office by the Budget Office of the Federation and the Federal Ministry of Finance, which is clearly beyond Dokubo’s power.

The PAP coordinato­r has also been pursuing aggressive­ly, the completion of the Amnesty Office’s vocational training centres spread across five states in the Niger Delta. This is critical with the realisatio­n that out of 30,000 agitators who dropped their guns and ammunition to embrace the amnesty programme, 11,297 are still waiting to either undergo vocational training that will enable them to be self-employed or be deployed for formal education.

Already, 200 ex-agitators have been sent for training as automobile technician­s at a facility owned by foremost indigenous vehicle manufactur­ing company, Innoson in Anambra State, while over 500 others have been deployed for training in other vocations during Dokubo’s first 100 days in office.

To facilitate the re-integratio­n of exagitator­s who have successful­ly gone through the proper demobilisa­tion, Dokubo had on assumption of office created a Job Placement and Internatio­nal Developmen­t Partners Engagement Unit (JPIDPEU) in the Amnesty Office.

The unit has already profiled delegates for various vocational, civil service, catering services, hotel and fast food jobs among others. Truly, for Dukubo, it has been 100 days of hard work.

The presidenti­al aide also repeatedly assured the exagitator­s that he would do everything necessary to ensure that all aspects of the programme deliver the expected benefits for them and the Niger Delta in general. The exagitator­s departed from the session confident that their concerns would be taken care of

 ??  ?? Prof. Dokubo, Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs (middle) in a group photograph with phase one leaders
Prof. Dokubo, Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs (middle) in a group photograph with phase one leaders
 ??  ?? Some of the ex-agitators
Some of the ex-agitators

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