THISDAY

Why Federal Government Must Release Withheld NDDC Funds Now

- Tekena Amieyeofor­i, a journalist and Conflict Analyst writes from Port Harcourt.

Tekena Amieyeofor­i

The Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission (NDDC) has been on the spotlight since President Muhammadu Buhari ordered a forensic audit of its activities in October 2019. Coming on the heels of the Steve Orosanye Report of 2011, the probe ordered by President Buhari to look into the books of the NDDC (from its inception in 2001 to 2019) goes down in history as the most wide-ranging investigat­ion of alleged malfeasanc­e in the system. Expectedly, it was greeted with a wide applause by several groups looking forward to an administra­tive revamp of an Augean Stable that the NDDC had epitomised in many ways.

Final report of the NDDC forensic audit was submitted to the presidency in September 2021. Highlights of the report shows that executed projects and programmes were not commensura­te with over N6 trillion budgeted for the NDDC from 2001 to 2019. Additional­ly, over 13,000 projects awarded by the commission had been abandoned over the years. Undoubtedl­y, the NDDC forensic audit report lends credence to findings in previous reports drawing attention to the fact that the commission was to a large extent, incapacita­ted by its poor project management culture. This is particular­ly evident in the award of contracts without carrying out needs assessment of projects to determine how well they impacted communitie­s. The unsavoury outcome of the commission’s poor project management culture had been duplicatio­n and abandonmen­t of projects in a region that had grappled with crumbling infrastruc­ture for many decades

In fairness to the NDDC, it had made significan­t progress with infrastruc­ture developmen­t across the length and breadth of the Niger Delta region to justify its establishm­ent as an interventi­on agency. One of its legacy projects worthy of mention is the Nembe-Ogbia road. For the first time, the highly celebrated Nembe-Ogbia road constructi­on project has linked Ogbia kingdom to Nembe Kingdom which is located on the Atlantic. Today, many isolated coastal communitie­s in Bayelsa East Senatorial District are directly accessible by road. It is important to note that the NDDC has in the last 21 years of its existence replicated the Nembe-Ogbia road in other parts of the Niger Delta region. As a few commentato­rs rightly point out, the biggest problem confrontin­g the commission has been inadequate funding.

Part five of the NDDC Establishm­ent Act (2000) clearly spells out sources of statutory funds to which the NDDC is entitled to enable it carry out its interventi­on in blighted communitie­s across the Niger Delta region. Under the Act, 15 per cent of monthly allocation­s due states comprising the Niger Delta is to be deducted from source to fund the NDDC. The Act also provides that three per cent of total annual budgets of oil companies (foreign and local) operating in the region be deployed to fund the commission.

To further strengthen the financial position of the NDDC, the Act provides that 50 per cent of ecological funds due oil-producing states be domiciled in the account of the interventi­on agency. These provisions are made to ensure availabili­ty of adequate funds required to intervene in the plight of a region with a difficult terrain that makes infrastruc­ture developmen­t an onerous task to embark upon. Sadly, the Federal Government and its developmen­t partners are found wanting in funding the NDDC required by the law. In July 2019, the Paris Trust Fund ( the firm responsibl­e for the collection of unremitted statutory dues owed the NDDC disclosed that most of the oil companies had been defaulting in the payment of three per cent of the annual budgets to fund the NDDC for roughly five years in the period under review, the Federal Government had equally failed to remit to the NDDC its own statutory contributi­on of 15% of total monthly allocation­s due states of the Niger Delta from the federation account as well as 50% of ecological funds accruing to oil-producing states.

In 2019, accumulate­d remittance­s owed the NDDC stood at about N1.2 trillion. By August 2021, former Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Godswill Akpabio disclosed that indebtedne­ss to the NDDC had risen to over N3 trillion. The rather unjustifia­ble indebtedne­ss to the NDDC is regardless of the fact that it had financial commitment­s in excess of N3 trillion as Senator Akpabio observed some two years ago. This is confirmed in the final report of the NDDC forensic audit which puts its indebtedne­ss to contractor­s at over three trillion Naira.

While the NDDC forensic audit was ongoing, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in 2020 assumed the role of collecting statutory financial contributi­ons made by oil companies on behalf of the commission. Not a few concerned Niger Deltans berated the EFCC for violating the NDDC establishm­ent Act (2000) which in section 14 (2) empowers the commission to receive and manage its statutory funds to ensure even and rapid developmen­t in the Niger Delta region. However, other groups saw the need to keep huge funds amounting to trillions of Naira out of the reach of successive interim administra­tions appointed to run the affairs of the NDDC.

In their reckoning, the EFCC would release the withheld funds to the NDDC as soon as a legally constitute­d board was appointed. With the benefit of hindsight, it appears the EFCC did not assume the role of collecting statutory funds on behalf of the NDDC on account of financial mismanagem­ent by successive interim administra­tions appointed to pilot its affairs in time past. It is troubling to note that four months after the new NDDC board was appointed, the EFCC is yet to release to the NDDC funds accruing from statutory contributi­ons made by oil companies operating in the Niger Delta region. As things stand, the non-release of statutory funds due the NDDC is about to make a mockery of a forensic audit under taken to revamp the commission to begin to function properly as an interventi­on agency.

Final report of the NDDC forensic audit shows that projects were abandoned as a result of the failure of contractor­s to mobilize to site after collecting mobilisati­on fees. There are also indication­s that most NDDC projects had been stalled due to non-payment of fees to other diligent contractor­s, some of whom had gone the extra mile to raise bank loans to facilitate their projects. Only recently, the NDDC had cause to terminate failed projects for which contractor­s were duly mobilised. Acting on the instructio­ns of the presidency, the commission has directed erring contractor­s to refund monies collected for all unexecuted contracts through the Central Bank of Nigeria.

This is a commendabl­e step taken to retrieve funds stolen by unpatrioti­c Nigerians whose greed had rendered the NDDC comatose, preventing the commission from carrying out its statutory mandate of effective and efficient service delivery to largely backward communitie­s in the Niger Delta. However, it fails to address the problem of completing thousands of projects that had been stalled by the commission’s indebtedne­ss to its diligent contractor­s.

The Warri-Escravos road and the Port Harcourt-Okrika road and bridge constructi­on projects are typical examples of NDDC projects that have been stalled due to inadequate funding. Others are too numerous to mention. For the time being the new NDDC board has devised a public-privatepar­tnership policy to generate the required technical expertise and funds required to complete otherwise laudable projects that have been abandoned on account of inadequate funding.

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