Category: Niger delta

  • Group cautions on blackmail against Omo-Agege, Delta APC leaders

    Group cautions on blackmail against Omo-Agege, Delta APC leaders

    A support group, the Coalition for Delta Interest (CDI), has warned against what it called daily campaigns of calumny against immediate past Deputy Senate President Ovie Omo-Agege and leaders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Delta State.

    Its convener and secretary Austin Kpedi and Eric Ikomi in a statement on Tuesday respectively said: ” Our attention has been drawn to different media publications and National Television programs where some groups of cheapjack speculators headed by an expelled chieftain of the APC are finding all possible means to get political patronage from President Bola Tinubu whose electoral victory they made no effort to contribute.

    These disparate elements who are rampaging the media with “Omo-Agege campaigned against Tinubu” were nowhere to be found in all APC campaigns, and meetings and thus failed to deliver their units for any APC candidates in the last elections. If these set of people were from Lagos State, they would also have accused Mr. President, His Excellency, Senator Bola Tinubu of working against himself because an opposition party defeated Mr. President in his Lagos State, a record which has not been broken for about twenty years.

    Read Also: Pipelines surveillance diversion: Ex-agitators seek Omo-Agege’s arrest

    ‘’While it is not necessary to duel on the rigorous grassroots campaign efforts of His Excellency, Distinguished Senator Ovie Omo-Agege alongside Olorogun O’tega Emerhor, Rt Hon. Victor Ochei, Chief Ayiri Emami, and other leaders of the Delta State APC vis-a-vis the outcome of the elections, we need to state vividly that the 2023 general election in Delta State yielded unprecedented results that made Delta APC secure two out of the three Senatorial elections, one Federal Constituency election and seven State House of Assembly elections. The Governorship and other elections which were rigged by the Delta State Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and their conspirators, shall be reversed through the party’s petitions backed up with insurmountable evidence.

    ‘’As a group, we embarked on various pre-campaign activities including solidarity walks for His Excellency, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and Senator Ovie Omo-Agege on different popular roads in Asaba, the Delta State Capital. We also participated in the One Million Man March for Tinubu and Omo-Agege as Coordinated by Chief Ominimini. It is pertinent to note that, the funding of these activities came from distinguished Senator Ovie Omo-Agege and other leaders of the party whose detractors are blackmailing their efforts.

    ‘’Those buying the blackmail from this set of helter-skelter politicians parading themselves as Delta APC members should demand their unit results in all the elections of 2023 to prove their commitments to the progress of the Party. Ms. Onochie, the recently sacked board Chairman of the Niger Delta Development Commission was alleged to have shared dollars to aid opposition parties’ victory in Delta State. She joined this maligning undertaking because it has been her stock in trade in earning appointment from the presidency”.

    The coalition urged the President and the National Leadership of the party to “be wary of this set of people whose mission is to reap from where they did not sow”.

  • Ogbuku takes NDDC to Niger Delta Creeks

    Ogbuku takes NDDC to Niger Delta Creeks

    • Ifeatu Agbo and Willie Etim

    A visit to Oporoza, in Gbaramatu Kingdom of Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State gives one an eerie feeling of drifting in the middle of the ocean. In the days of militancy in the Niger Delta region, the mere mention of Oporoza or its neighbour Okerenkoko sets off palpitations in many hearts.

    So, an inspection tour of projects executed by the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, in Oporoza and Ugborodo communities through the meandering creeks of the delta is not an assignment for the faint hearted.

    Although the spokesman of Gbaramatu Kingdom, Chief Godspower Gbebekama, would want visitors to feel at home in the island, the reality is that the creepy feeling that one is in a zone wrapped in an aura of mystic, still persists.

    Just to think that the kingdom is the homestead of the former leader of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, gets one edgy as the speed boat bounces through the waves to the landing jetty.

    Gbebekama and other community leaders of the town feel pained about the negative perception of Oporoza as a hot-bed of militancy. “We are peaceful and law-abiding people like other Nigerians. All our people are asking for is development. We contribute enormously to the economy of Nigeria, so we expect that basic amenities like water and schools should be provided for us.”

    It was against this background that the NDDC Managing Director, Dr Samuel Ogbuku, led a team of Directors and other officials of the interventionist agency into the depts of the ocean, as it were. For four hours, high ranking officials of the Commission traversed the creeks and open water-ways in Warri and Escravos, to inspect NDDC projects in some of the coastal areas of Delta State. On arrival at the Oporoza jetty, a group of young men waited anxiously for us to disembark. One of them had a video camera that was recording every move we made right from the landing point.

    In a way, the people of Oporoza may be right in saying that they are being misjudged by those of us who are still petrified by the stories woven around communities in the frontline of militant agitations in the past. When our speedboat anchored at the jetty after a bumpy ride on rough waters, we saw a people that were very receptive. That friendly disposition helped to shore up our confidence and wiped out the impression that the island harbours militants.

    Perhaps, the NDDC team got a friendly treatment because of the past performances of the Commission in the Gbaramatu kingdom. They will not forget in a hurry that the NDDC built and commissioned a health centre for them when the entire Gbaramatu kingdom had no modern health care facility.

    The Cottage Hospital in Okerenkoko saved the people from the dangerous practice of self-medication and the hazardous boat trips to Warri whenever anyone took ill or when women were in labour. The Gbaramatu Kingdom hosts Shell Petroleum Development Company, SPDC, which has numerous flow stations at the Jones Creek and Chevron oil terminal in Ogborodo.

    Ogbuku inspected the shore protection project in Ogborodo, which had been stalled for many years. The situation at the site was not encouraging because the contractor was said to have abandoned the shore protection and reclamation project.

    Mr. Victor Omunu, one of the opinion leaders in the area, decried the conduct of the contractor, whom he said collected money for the job and barely scratched the surface, lamenting that the contractor disappointed and short-changed the people.

    Omunu said that the poor performance of the contractor had rubbed off negatively on the NDDC, adding that it would take a complete turnaround to change the perception of the people about the Commission. Pa Wawe Agba, an elder in the community, agreed that the credibility of the NDDC was on the line because previous promises made by the Commission to the people were not fulfilled. “We want results not promises,” he said.

    The NDDC team had earlier inspected the first phase of the canalization of Oporoza creek, which had been completed. Ogbuku, who led the team noted that the project would provide easy access and navigation for the communities and the oil company operating in the Gbaramatu kingdom.

    Ogbuku, who was accompanied by the Executive Director Projects Mr. Charles Ogunmola and other Directors of the Commission, assured that work on all infrastructure projects in the Niger Delta region would be completed to positively impact on the lives of the people.

    The inspection team also paid a courtesy visit to the Pere of Gbaramatu Kingdom, King Oboro Gbaruan II, at his palace in Oporoza.

    The NDDC boss identified Escravos as an area of special economic priority, stating that NDDC was taking steps to make it more accessible by rallying the support of stakeholders for a broad partnership that will expedite the construction and completion of the Warri-Omadino-Escravos Road.

    He said: ” We have reached out to Chevron Nigeria Limited and other stakeholders, seeking for partnership for the completion of this road and other projects.

    “We chose the Public Private Partnership, PPP, model as an alternative source of funding for the Commission. So, we have been going about seeking funding partners to complete our current projects and also start new ones.”

    The NDDC boss noted that the partnership between the Shell Petroleum Development Company, SPDC, and the NDDC in the construction of the 25.735-kilometre Ogbia-Nembe Road should be replicated for other projects.

    Read Also: ‘NDDC will support efforts to tackle mental health’

    Ogbuku told the monarch that the 2024 NDDC budget would have inputs from all major stakeholders in the region, stating: “In our budgeting for 2024, we told our budget committee to have a stakeholder’s conference for it. The budget cannot be NDDC budget alone, it must be a budget for people of the region.”

    The traditional ruler of Gbaramatu kingdom, King Oboro Gbaruan II, urged the NDDC to ensure that none of its projects was abandoned, noting that non-completion of projects was responsible for the slow pace of development in the Niger Delta region.

    The monarch declared: “As traditional rulers, we are worried that development is not moving as fast as we expected. We have played our own role by ensuring that there is peace in the Niger Delta region. Having provided a peaceful environment, there should be no excuse for not developing our region.”

    Earlier, in an address by the Gbaramatu Traditional Council of Chiefs, the spokesman of the kingdom, Chief Godspower Gbebekama, affirmed that the NDDC had several on-going projects which needed to be completed.

    He observed: “In spite of the daunting challenges of the Commission, your intervention is evident in the Niger Delta and Gbaramatu Kingdom in particular.” According to him, NDDC projects in the area include the Warri-Amadino-Okerenkoko Road, the Seitorububou-Kurutie-Ubafan Road and bridges, canalization of Oporoza Creek, the reclamation and sand-filling of Benikurukuru community, among others.

    The chiefs appealed to the NDDC to adequately fund the projects to ensure that they were completed for the benefit of the people, stating: “The NDDC was created to attend to the peculiar developmental needs of the Niger Delta region.”

    For the people of Omadino, the plan by the NDDC to enlist partners for the execution of the road linking them to Escravos gives them hope.

    According to Ambassador Austin Oniyecum, one of the prominent Ijaw leaders in the area, the Warri-Omadino-Escravos Road will reduce the stress and cut the distance of travelling on water. “It takes over two hours to travel from Omadino to Okerenkoko now, but the road will reduce that time to only 20 minutes. That is why we consider the project as very important,” he said.

    However, this important road link suffered a setback when the Omadino community asked for a re-alignment of the route to make way for a new university that is being planned for the area.

    Ogbuku assured the people of Omadino, as well as other coastal communities that the NDDC would not relent in its efforts to provide development infrastructure for them. He said: “I can assure you that the NDDC is determined to make a difference in the lives of the people. We will continue to build new roads and bridges as well as complete on-going reclamation and shore protection projects.”

    It takes a visit to coastal communities for anyone to begin to appreciate their plight. One of the youths in Ugborodo, who simply identified himself as Johnson, said that nobody would want to spend weeks in the creeks. He said that those who have the means, run away from the area to live in Warri. “Living in the creeks is nothing but tortuous. That is why we are crying that government and NDDC should develop our area. We deserve some basic amenities as people from whose land oil is drilled to sustain Nigeria,” he said.

  • Jamila Ibrahim is new national leader of PYWF

    Jamila Ibrahim is new national leader of PYWF

    Jamila Bio Ibrahim, a medical doctor, astute politician and development practitioner, is the President of the Progressive Young Women Forum (PYWF).

    The PYWF is a diverse network of young female peers between the ages of 18 and 40 driven by the primary objective of causing progressive changes to the status quo in politics, business and society.

    The acting National Publicity Secretary PYWF, Theresa Tekenah, in a statement, explained the new President will be serving in acting capacity with other newly-appointed national executives of the forum.

    She is replacing Osamaye Seun Bosede who recently resigned the position.

    Other newly-appointed excos include Iwagun Temitope as Acting Vice President; Patience Charles Kwache as Acting National Secretary; Barr Faith Obasuyi as Acting Legal Adviser; Maryam Gwarzo as Acting Contact and Mobilization Officer, and Mary Azaki as Acting Treasurer.

    Read Also: Women’s leader advises youths to mobilise 

    Stella Enyi will continue to serve as Acting National Organizing Secretary, and Hajiya Fatima Sani as Acting National Welfare Secretary.

    In her congratulatory message to the new national executives, the founder/BOT Chairman of the PYWF, Stella Okotete, urged continued fidelity to the vision of the forum. 

    This includes the provision of mentorship and leadership experience to young women to facilitate their personal elevation across different sectors and increase women-driven changes in the world.

    She commended the bold steps taken by the Exco and Members of PYWF in repositioning the forum for effective leadership and efficiency, while encouraging the BOT members and the six regional advisers to take further steps in repositioning the forum in alignment with its core principles and for necessary improvements in activities and programs.

    “We will support you to be the voice of young women in Nigeria, Africa and the world,” she assured.

    The acting President Dr. Jamila Bio Ibrahim is a public servant of note and a top advocate of the United Nations Global Goals (SDGs). She served as the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor of Kwara State on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    She has also served in various capacities as a serial humanitarian volunteer, including serving in the northeast region of Nigeria on the platform of The Presidential Committee on the NorthEast initiative (PCNI). There, she joined efforts to provide support to the vulnerable and internally displaced persons in the region.

    Jamila is a dedicated woman and youth advocate who believes strongly in the emancipation of women and youth in the society for socio-economic development of their communities and country at large, through active participation in socio-political activities.

  • Failed power projects spark social vices in Niger Delta communities

    Failed power projects spark social vices in Niger Delta communities

    • Idle youths rob, rape young girls searching for where to charge phones at night
    • Economic activities grounded as affected people flee communities

    Social vices are on the increase in many Niger Delta communities following the absence of power supply, which has caused many able bodied youths in the affected areas to lose their means of livelihood. Kaani, Bara-ama and Ayetoro in Rivers, Bayelsa and Ondo states respectively are some of the affected communities. Different kinds of power project contracts have been awarded in some of the communities but ended up not done at all or partially executed and abandoned. Idle youths hiding under the cover of darkness have resorted to unleashing terror on innocent people, especially young girls who are raped and left to nurse their wounds, INNOCENT DURU reports.

    Kaani, a suburb of Khaana Local Government Area in oil-rich Rivers State, is fast becoming a land of jobless people, especially the youth,  following the absence of power supply in the community. Since the community came into existence till date, the people have never enjoyed electricity.

    The ugly development,  according to findings, has forced many inhabitants whose vocations are power-dependent to close shops. The ugly trend, it was learnt, has thrown up an army hoodlums who take joy in unleashing terror on the  people, especially young girls who are raped and inflicted with injuries.

      “There has never been power supply here in Kaani. We have never even seen electricity cable before,” a youth leader, Mbani Friday Barilule, said in a voice laced with anger.

    Where there is no light, he said, “it is difficult for you to send your daughter to buy something after sunset. 

    “But in a rural environment like ours, we don’t have an option because if you don’t send your daughter, who are you going to send to help you get one thing or the other?

    The youth leader regretted that many young girls have been sexually abused by idle young men that absence of power supply in the area has continued to breed.

    He said: “There have been rising incidents of rape in the community. I have personally taken some survivors to the hospital. I have also taken some cases to the police station.

    “I can vividly recall three of such cases. One of them involved a little girl who was asked by her mother to help her buy something from a provision store. The owner of the shop asked her to come inside and started dipping his finger into her private parts.

    “The girl was a friend to the man’s granddaughter. The old man later asked one of his sons to go and give drugs to the girl.

    “The family took the  girl aged between 11 and 12 years to a chemist for an injection, and that was where I came in. The girl was not sick, so why give her an injection and what kind of injection are you people giving to her in the absence of her parents?

    “I went to Bori Police Station to lodge a complaint and the DPO  kindly gave me two vans to arrest the man. 

    “The second one was a clear case of  rape on a girl in the evening. It is difficult to see young girls move around in the evenings except the ones that are not under their parents’ control.

    “The ones that are not under parental control are prone to  being sexually abused and they often have nobody to speak for them.

    “For many people in the community, rape has become a norm.

    “When I took the old man to the police station, the family was asking me if he was the only one that had done such in the community.

    “Their reaction made me  to feel that the trend has become a normal thing in the area.”

    Our findings showed that the embattled community had had its hope raised a number of times about the area being electrified, but none has materialised.

    One of such occasions was during the  military regime of Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (rtd). The government had raised the hope of the people of Kaani when the then Directorate of Food and Rural Infrastructure (DFFRI), mounted electric poles in the community to provide power for the people. The project was later abandoned, dashing the hope of the people.

    In 2017, the immediate past governor of Rivers State,  Nyesom Wike, during the celebration of the state’s  Golden Jubilee, had vowed that his administration would embark on an aggressive rural electrification scheme in a bid to revive the rural economy.

    Then, Wike, through his Chief of Staff Chukwuemeka Woke, had said that the state government believed that rural electrification was key to stimulating the economies of the rural communities. He revealed that the state government had set up a high-powered committee to interface with a major independent power producer to electrify key areas and facilities in the state so as to ensure uninterrupted power supply to major businesses and government facilities. Many  years down the line, and till he left office,  nothing has changed about the plight of Kaani people.

    Our correspondent stumbled on a document directing the Niger Delta Development Commission to carry out power projects in Kaani 1 and 2. The project, said to worth about N248,365,200 was scheduled to be executed in 2021, but nothing of such has taken place, thus increasing criminal activities and forcing many people to leave the community.

    A member of Kaani community, who gave his name simply as Freedom, said he heard about the NDDC project and some others but it all ended as a talk show.

    Freedom said: “We don’t know anything called power supply except you have a generator in your house.

    “There was a time the former chairman promised to give us electricity, but that was not done before he left.

    “I also heard of a power contract by the NDDC, but nothing came out of it.”

    Lamenting how the situation in the area has affected him, he said: “I do need power supply for my work.

    “I do mobile computer services and I need power to do this. Now all the money we make goes into running and maintaining power generator.

    “People without power cannot function.”

    He also corroborated Mbari’s remark about incidents of rape in the community, saying:

    “Some of the girls are raped while going to charge phones in somebody’s house. Some of them are attacked and have their phones stolen by the bad boys while returning from where they had gone to charge them.

    Also decrying their plight, Bari, another member of the community, said he was one of the people badly hit by the absence of power supply in the area.

    “I need power supply badly for my business but there is no power supply in the community till now.  Darkness pervades everywhere once it is night. It is only God that can help us.

    “Some people have left the community  because of the challenges of power supply and attacks by hoodlums,” he said.

    On the incidence of rape, he said:

    “I wish you could use your eyes to see the implications of absence of power supply in the area. There have been cases of rape and violent attacks. I can point to about four persons that I know to have been raped and their cases are  with the police.”

    He noted that “the guys perpetrating this evil see it as a way of life. There is a way you will say something about the ugly development and they will come for you.

    “One of the guys that used to lead the gang of rapists was killed recently but there are other ones still involved in the criminal act.

    “The hoodlums went to a church and whisked a girl away. They may not kill her but they will rape her and collect her valuables. 

    “This is a community where you cannot see someone walking ahead of you. If there is solar power, you would see somebody afar and know what is happening.”

    He added that  rape survivors are inflicted with injuries but “they incidentally are not taken to the hospital to check if they have diseases. Some of the parents don’t have the means and/or not knowledgeable about it.  They will just give home treatment to the girl and that will be all.

    “Every parent in the community has warned their daughters against moving about aimlessly.

    “I have a grown up daughter but I will never send  her out  once it is 5pm except I will go with her. If she drops our phone where we used to charge it, it is the next day that she will go and pick it. It is that bad.

    The monarch of the community, according to Bari, has tried his best to tackle the problem “but the people involved are always looking for ways of attacking him instead of desisting from the ungodly act.

    People in other communities have power supply or street solar light but we don’t have any.  If you spend a night in this place, you will better understand what I am telling you.”

    Why we are still in darkness -Kaaani Youth leader  

    Mbani Friday blamed the absence of power supply in the community on the inability of  Kaani to have a representative at any level of government in the state. 

    His words: “We don’t have people in government, and you know the system in Nigeria. If your community people are not in government, you will find it difficult to get even the presence of the local government in your community, not to talk of that of the state or federal government.

    “When someone is in power from a community, they say this is our time  and our turn, and by so doing, attract projects  to their community.   

    “This will tell you indirectly that since the creation of Kaani the indigenes have never gone close to power.”

    Ondo community wallows in darkness

    The inhabitants of Ayetoro community in Ondo State have also not had electricity supply from the government in spite of the huge revenue the country generates  from exploiting crude oil from the state.

    Findings revealed that the only power supply enjoyed by the community was the one they got through communal efforts. Unfortunately for them, the challenge of sea surge ravaging the area has destroyed the project.

    Going down memory lane, a member of the community, Emmanuel Aralu, said: “The challenge of power supply has been from inception. From 1947, we have not had power supply from the government. The power we enjoyed was from our communal efforts.

    “After Lagos and Ibadan, Ayetoro was another place in the Western Nigeria where people enjoyed power supply 24 hours a day.

    “We started using  our independent power supply since 1953 or 54. The engine was bought from Western Germany and people used to contribute money to buy diesel to power it.

    “Unfortunately for us, the ocean surge ravaging the community has damaged the power plant. All the engines have turned into scrap as a result of recurrent sea surge.”

    Emmanuel said the community had just acquired solar power to light up major streets where people move around at night.

    “This cost us a lot of money to fix,” he said.

    Apart from those who have money to buy generators, other people in the community don’t have power supply.

    “A society where there is no power supply is automatically an underdeveloped place,” Aralu said, adding: “We have engineers  and artisans who need  electricity to carry out their jobs on a daily basis in order to earn a living, but that is not possible.

    “There are hordes of business people who depend on power to sell their goods but can’t do so because of the situation at hand. 

    “Bars and restaurants depend on fuel to make their drinks cold. This makes the  price at which they will sell to be higher.

    “Women in the community can no longer go into frozen food business, which some of them were using to support their families in the past.

    “It is very difficult at this point to run such a business with generator because of the rise in fuel price.”  

    Aralu noted that now that petrol price has gone up, some people cannot afford to buy it every day to run their businesses.

    Personally, he said: “Absence of power supply has also affected my work.  People come to have their haircut at night, and if there is no power supply I can’t work. Now that there is a hike in the pump price of PMS, it becomes economically killing for us to switch on generator from 7:30 pm till 10 or 11pm  when we are not sure that customers will come.”

    Also lamenting their predicament, the Public Relations Officer of Ayetoro Community Youth Congress, Comrade Omoyele Akingboye, spoke in a tone that reverberated with pain. 

    “We have never had power supply from the government but we have always had independent power supply that was put in place on August 11, 1953,” he said, corroborating Aralu.

    “When we started generating power in 1953, Mr J Mellanby came for its inauguration when he heard about it on August 24, 1953. But the power house has been destroyed by the ravaging sea surge. 

    “As it stands now, the engines that were bought by the community for the purpose of power generation have become detonated because we have not used them in the past 30 years.

    “Now, our people individually source their power supply which is through generating set.

    “The economy of our community has been adversely affected because there is no power supply.

    “Some individuals whose businesses require power have gone all out to buy engines and power it by themselves. Some who cannot afford engines are using solar powered light now.

    “Some who have no financial wherewithal have diverted to other business to earn a living and cater for their families.”

    Worried by the security challenges that may crop up as a result of the community being in darkness, Akingboye said: “We sold the detonated engines that we have not used for the past 30 years as scrap. The money realised from it was used to do solar street light for places that have not been ravaged by sea surge.

    “The absence of power supply has security implications for our community, and that  is why money realised from the engines that were sold was used to provide streetlights to ensure criminal activities are not perpetrated at night.  Criminal activities at night in Ayetoro are minimal. There is no place where there is no crime, but we believe that God resides where there is light.”

     NDDC solar light projects vanish in Ayetoro

    A multi-million naira solar light projects meant to save the embattled community from darkness was said to have all disappeared.

    Speaking on the project, Aralu said: “The NDDC project was done about a decade ago. It was to be done in phases. 

    “At one point they brought two lights, at another time they brought three and so on. We really didn’t have it brought at once for us to enjoy it.

    “The project was abandoned and as good as a waste of money. Most of those things they did have been destroyed by ocean surge.”

    Bara-mam community in Bayelsa enveloped by darkness

    In 2000, a former  governor of Bayelsa State, the late Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, promised to supply the local government areas in the state with pipe borne water and electricity before July, 2001.

    The promise ended up as a political statement. Many communities in the state are said to lack power supply 23 years after the late former governor made the promise.

    Bara-ama community in Brass Local Government Area is one of the communities wallowing in darkness. For the community’s residents, nightfall comes with sorrow as they are always living in darkness.

    “They rely on the moon to move about at night and use anything light they can afford to see in their houses.”

    The  Community Development Secretary, Jeremiah Johnbull, in a chat with our correspondent, said: “We have never had electricity in our community. We don’t have wire and we have never had poles.

    “Those who have money buy fuel to power their generators while those who have no money remain in darkness. 

    “We have approached different  non-governmental organisations and government authorities to give power supply but all is to no avail.”

    The economy of the community, according to him, has also been badly affected.

    “People who had cold rooms have abandoned them because there is no light. Many of the people have left the community,” he said. 

    NDDC  declined comment when our correspondent sought the commission’s remark on the plight of the above communities.

    NDDC Chair, MD fight dirty at Senate over alleged corruption

    The Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) is saddled with the responsibility of offering lasting solution to the socio-economic difficulties in the region and to facilitate the rapid  and sustainable development of the area into a region that is economically prosperous, socially stable  ecologically regenerative and politically peaceful.

    Laudable as the mission of the commission is, it has been found to have been deeply enmeshed in corruption over the years. Monies meant to provide basic amenities for the embattled citizens who suffer grievously for oil exploration in their communities end up in private pockets. 

    About N6 trillion was allegedly misappropriated in the running of the NDDC between 2001and 2019. A former minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Godwill Akpabio, while presenting a forensic audit report on the commission, said over 13,000 projects were abandoned in the region. 

    Last month (May), the Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) Samuel Ogbuku, and the Chairman of the Board, Lauretta Onochie, fought dirty as they accused each other of corrupt practices.

    Ogbuku and Onochie engaged in the sordid exchanges during an investigative hearing by the Senate Committee on unauthorised spending of the 2021 and 2022 budget of the agency without National Assembly’s approval.

    The managing director was represented at the session by the Executive Director in charge of Finance and Administration, Charles Airhiavere, while Onochie appeared in person.

    Airhiavere accused Onochie of overstepping her bounds by desperately seeking to be a signatory to NDDC’s accounts.

    He alleged that Onochie even wrote a letter to the Accountant-General of the Federation seeking to be made a signatory to the agency’s accounts.

    Onochie, however, said the decision for her to be a signatory to the accounts was taken by the board at one of its meetings, adding that it was not a personal decision.

    She said the request for change of signatory was rejected because the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) directed the managing director to ensure that her confirmation was sought in every financial transaction.

    “The CBN said I should be the confirming authority but they didn’t come back to me. That is why they have been operating the way they like,” Onochie said.

    Onochie, however, accused the managing director and the entire management of running the commission in breach of financial regulations.

    She alleged that the NDDC management currently operates a total of 367 accounts against the dictates of the Treasury Single Accounts (TSA) policy of the Federal Government.

    According to Onochie, all these accounts are in foreign exchange (FOREX).

    The managing director denied the existence of 367 accounts in the agency but admitted that it operates only four.

    Onochie also informed the Senate that since the board assumed office in January 2023, it had not enjoyed the cooperation of the management of the NDDC.

    She alleged the managing director had been frustrating attempts to hold board meetings where necessary decisions ought to be taken.

    This allegation was rejected by the managing director who said the main problem arose from what he called “trust deficit” between the board and the management.

    Airhiavere also said that the board never gave sufficient notice of any board meeting as required by law.

    Onochie further informed the Senate Committee that part of the abuse of financial regulations displayed by the Ogbuku-led management was the increase of the monthly imprest for the managing director from N4 billion to N10 billion.

    The Senate Committee led by Senator Yusuf Yusuf (APC, Taraba Central) expressed shock at the disclosures made by the board and the management of the NDDC.

  • Family seeks N11m for teenager’s spinal surgery

    Family seeks N11m for teenager’s spinal surgery

    The family of a 13-year-old boy, Israel Ajofoyinbo, who is diagnosed with a spine condition — scoliosis, has sought the assistance of Nigerians for surgery. 

    According to his parent,  N11 million is urgently required to save his life. 

    A medical report signed by the physicians of Shriners Hospitals for Children in Philadelphia — Dr. Joshua Pahys and Dr. Bethany Lipa, explained that Israel will receive pre-admission testing, halo gravity traction surgery, surgery for posterior spinal fusion and other consultations which will aid his recovery.

    Read Also: Teenager needs N1.8m for jaw cancer surgery

    Israel’s distraught parents lamented that the medical condition has stopped their child from walking, causing him pains and discomfort. 

    They are pleading for financial support from the public for the surgery.

    Interested Nigerians may donate to the family’s GT Bank Account Number: Ojo-Ajofoyinbo Abiodun Abio – 0050699086 or Ojo-Ajofoyinbo Abiodun Abiola (FCMB) – 9136813013 

  • Ayambem reelected Cross River Speaker

    Ayambem reelected Cross River Speaker

    Cross River Assembly on Tuesday elected Mr. Elvert Ayambem of the All Progressive Congress(APC) and the member representing Ikom-2 State constituency as Speaker of the 10th Assembly.

    He was returned unopposed by the 25- members Assembly with 20 legislators from the ruling APC; four from the People’s Democratic Party(PDP) and one member of the Labour Party.

    The election of the Deputy Speaker was also seamless as Mr. Sylvester Agabi also of the APC, representing Obudu State Constituency was returned unopposed.

    Read Also: Otu decries erosion in Cross River

    Governor Bassey Otu, in his good will message to the Assembly delivered by his Deputy Mr. Peter Odey, prayed for maximum cooperation of the legislature with the executive for quick delivery of the expected democratic dividends to the people.

    Responding, Speaker Ayambem thanked God, his fellow legislators and his political party (APC) for the confidence reposed on him to lead the 10th Assembly.

    He pledged that his Leadership will put the people first in alignment with the agenda of the State Governor.

    He urged his colleagues to put Cross River State interest first in the discharge of their assignment to make the state functional and reposition it to her era of glory.

  • Nigeria’s enemies recirculating Idiroko border opening video – RIPAN

    Nigeria’s enemies recirculating Idiroko border opening video – RIPAN

    The Rice Processors Association of Nigeria (RIPAN) has accused economic saboteurs of attempting to cause confusion in the country.

    A video showing customs officers reopening the Idiroko Border in April 2022 went viral this week on social media platforms.

    The recirculation, according to RIPAN, was to give the notion that the federal government had just approved the resumption of import and export via Idiroko.

    A statement on Friday by the Director General Andy Ekwelem advised the general public to ignore misinformation and stay on the lookout.

    “It is essential that we bring this information to remind everyone of the importance of staying vigilant and not be misled by sensational news trends,” it reads.

    “The Rice Processors Association of Nigeria (RIPAN) suspects that some enemies of Nigeria’s economy are behind the circulation of an old video.

    Read Also: Customs intercepts fake drugs at Seme Border, arrest four

    “The individuals/groups seek to undermine the new government and promote illegal activities such as rice smuggling from Benin Republic, Niger Republic and Cameroon for personal gain.

    “We urge the government and stakeholders to avoid falling prey to the machinations of those trying to sabotage the economy and exploit our big brotherly role within the sub-region.

    “We encourage Nigerians to report any smuggling activity and other acts that may undermine the progress of our agricultural sector to the Nigeria Customs Service.

    “We must all work together to build a stronger economy that benefits the people. RIPAN is dedicated to supporting the efforts of the federal government to improve food security.”

    In his clarification, Customs Public Relations Officer, Abubakar Maiwada explained that the country presently has no closed border.

    “All major borders are open. The video showing the Idiroko border opening is an old video that a mischief maker repackaged to create a wrong narrative,” he said.

  • Tinubu deserves support on fuel subsidy removal- Okumagba

    Tinubu deserves support on fuel subsidy removal- Okumagba

    A member of the Governing Board of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) Olorogun Bernard Okumagba has stated that the end of the petrol subsidy regime is in Nigeria’s interest.

    He appealed to all Nigerians to support President Tinubu’s commitment to rebuild the economy for the benefit of all Nigerians.

    In a statement dated June 1, Olorogun Okumagba, a former Commissioner of Finance in Delta State, supported President Bola Tinubu’s position in his inaugural address where he stated that “we commend the decision of the outgoing administration in phasing out the petrol subsidy regime which has increasingly favoured the rich more than the poor. Subsidy can no longer justify its ever-increasing costs in the wake of drying resources. We shall instead re-channel the funds into better investment in public infrastructure, education, health care and jobs that will materially improve the lives of millions.”

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    According to Okumagba, the 2023 Budget only made provisions for Petrol subsidy up till June 2023. In effect, there is no appropriation for fuel subsidy beyond June 2023. Accordingly, subsidy on petrol has already been phased out by the previous administration.

    Okumagba commended Tinubu for implementing the policy as part of the government’s overall agenda to re-boot the economy and make it productive for the benefit of all Nigerians.

    According to the NDDC Board member, “the truth is that the fuel subsidy regime has been a drainpipe on our resources and commonwealth. The subsidy regime created a class of corruptly wealthy businessmen and women and some public officers with whom they collude to inflate consumption figures that determine the rates of subsidy payments.”

    The former Delta Commissioner of Finance observed that under the subsidy regime, “Official” petroleum consumption figures in Nigeria have been significantly inflated because it is the basis on which subsidy payments are calculated and paid to petrol importers / marketers. The result is that public funds are going into private pockets with no value received for those funds.

    Okumagba stated that it makes more economic sense to subsidize production and productivity than to subsidize individual consumption – which is what we have been doing with petrol subsidy. However, where consumption is subsidized, it is better to do so for essential services such as public transportation with buses, waterways and railways.

    He further stated that the petrol subsidy regime has over the years encouraged the smuggling of our subsidized petrol across our borders with West African neighbours where petrol is more expensive because it sells at market prices. Marketers who can make double profits in cross-border markets as opposed to the internal Nigerian market where the petrol price is fixed do so to the great disadvantage of Nigeria and Nigerians – depleting our country’s hard earned resources and creating petrol scarcity in our country.

    According to Okumagba, opportunities for rent seeking and unproductive arbitrage need to be reduced in our Nation. With subsidy removal, petrol supply (via importation or domestic refining), will become more available and competitive, thereby driving down costs over time.

    He regretted that Nigeria has for years been borrowing to fund subsidies on petrol importation. “We are now debt-distressed as repaying our debt is consuming a very significant percentage of our earned revenues. We should not continue borrowing to pay for “petrol subsidies” that generate nothing that we can utilize to repay the debts,” he remarked.

    Okumagba also stated that over N13.7 Trillion of the nation’s scarce earnings, as verified by Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) spent on subsidizing petrol consumption from 2005 to 2020 could have been better ploughed into the critical sectors of education, healthcare, and reduction of poverty, critical indices of Human Development Index (HDI). This amount excludes the figures for 2021 to half-year 2023 estimated at over N7 Trillion.

    According to Okumagba, other strategic sectors that savings from removal of petrol subsidy can also be channeled to, are agriculture and improved transport infrastructure because Nigeria possesses abundant arable land areas that are uncultivated because they are not presently accessible, while good road infrastructure will reduce transport costs, making it easier for businesses to reach internal and external markets.

    Olorogun Okumagba therefore urged the Federal Government to design and implement programmes that will cushion the effect of the subsidy removal on the masses such as a cash-transfer scheme targeted at the poor, reduction of excise taxes payable by citizens, subsidy of public transportation by buses, railways and waterways to free up the earnings of our citizens and increase their purchasing power.

  • Raising the Bar of Performance in NDDC: Ogbuku’s PPP Template

    Raising the Bar of Performance in NDDC: Ogbuku’s PPP Template

    • By, Willie Etim

    The concept of “Rewind to Rebirth is sweet to the ears. This is the first time in 15 years that I am attending an NDDC function and this is because the current leadership of the Commission is charting a new course that is impressive. ”Those were the words of a former Chief Executive Officer of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, Chief Timi Alaibe, as he reviewed the prospects and the initial strides of the new team. Alaibe, who had worn the shoes of the interventionist agency, surely knows where it pinches.

    He spoke at the NDDC Public Private Partnership, PPP, Summit, held at the prestigious Eko Hotel & Suites, Lagos on April 25, 2023.The man, affectionately known as the principal by the NDDC family, stated: “the PPP initiative is the right way to go because we need the private sector to help with funding and expertise. ”Bringing the likes of Alaibe and other stakeholders of the Niger Delta region, including captains of industry in the private sector under one roof to explore ways of driving sustainable development in Nigeria’s oil-rich Niger Delta region, points the way to a new dispensation.

    Read Also: Senate passes N1.4tr NDDC’s 2021, 2022 budgets

    Leading the charge in this new era, the NDDC Managing Director, Dr Samuel Ogbuku, explained that the commission decided to adopt the PPP model to provide alternative sources of funding for its key development projects and programmes. He declared: “Our ‘Rewind to Rebirth’ initiative is a strategic vision designed to recalibrate our engagement with the Niger Delta and the Commission’s overall intervention implementation plan. Embedded in this initiative include exploring more avenues for funding, for better technical expertise, for higher yielding varieties of crops, as well as opportunities for collaboration and investment in the Niger Delta region.”Ogbuku, a development strategist and administrator, gives more background to what could be described as a paradigm shift in the efforts to develop the Niger Delta region.

    He said: “The current Board and Management, in its bid to do things differently so as to effectively drive sustainable development in the region, decided to adopt the PPP model to provide alternative sources of funding for key development projects and programmes. “We have started engagement with the key stakeholders, such as the oil companies who contribute three per cent of their operational budget to the Commission; the state governments; traditional rulers; Civil Society Groups; youth organisations and Contractors. “We are showing in our operations, through our example and conduct, how diligence, due process and transparency are key ingredients to building confidence and trust among all partners and stakeholders. We are committed to not just being transparent, but we want to be seen to be transparent. ”Listing the commission’s achievements, he said: “In the coming weeks, some of our major projects will be inaugurated.

    Among this is the 132/33kv sub-station constructed by the Commission in Okitipupa, which will provide electricity for over 2,000 communities spread across five local government areas of Ondo State. ”According to Ogbuku, “another key project that is ready for inauguration is the Ogbia-Nembe Road, which was jointly funded by Shell Petroleum Development Company, SPDC, and the NDDC. ”The collaboration with Shell on the 29-kilometre road, remains a model that needs to be replicated and the NDDC appears to be heading in that direction. In this wise, the NDDC boss said that as part of efforts to renew and reposition the Commission, the Governing Board stepped up collaboration with various stakeholders. Ogbuku explained: “We have started engagement with the key stakeholders, such as the oil companies who contribute three per cent of their operational budget to the Commission; the state governments, traditional rulers, Civil Society Groups, youth organisations and contractors.” Part of these engagements was the meeting between the NDDC and members of the Oil Producers Trade Section, OPTS, of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

    According to Ogbuku, the “group, which embodies the International Oil Companies, IOCs, stand out for us because we need their cooperation to get full and prompt remittances of their contributions as prescribed by law.” Other stakeholders that he mentioned, include, local, state and federal governments. He rationalized that “by partnering with government agencies and departments, participating in government-led initiatives, and advocating for policies that promote sustainable development”, the NDDC can access government resources, policies, and programmes that support its development objectives. Premising on their expertise in promoting sustainable development in developing countries as well as offering technical assistance, Ogbuku said that multilateral agencies such as the World Bank, African Development Bank (AfDB), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and International Monetary Fund (IMF) can provide technical support, funding, and policy advice for the NDDC. Again, Ogbuku said that the NDDC would be banking on multinational corporations such as Shell, Chevron, ExxonMobil and Total to collaborate with the NDDC in executing legacy projects. He said that the oil giants “have what it takes to provide funding, technical assistance, and expertise in environmental management, community development and corporate social responsibility.

    ”Along this line, the NDDC took what was explained as preliminary steps by signing a memorandum of understanding with a United States-based firm, Atlanta Global Resources Inc., AGRI, to build a railway network that will connect the nine states of the Niger Delta region. The ceremony, which was one of the highlights of the PPP Summit, gave a positive indication that better days were ahead. In fact, the NDDC stated that work on the preliminary stages of the project, perhaps the biggest in the history of the Commission, is expected to start immediately. Obviously, elated by this development, the NDDC boss described the event as representing a big harvest for the Commission from the PPP Summit.

    The Chief Executive Officer of Atlanta Global Resources Inc, Mr. Tony Ekpele, said the company was partnering with NDDC to as much as possible provide funds for the Commission to construct, operate and also manage the rail line. In his keynote presentation, the Executive Secretary of Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board, Engr. Simbi Wabote, stressed that for partnerships to be successful, they must be based on proper analysis and studies. While commending the initiative of the NDDC to attract additional funding through PPP, he warned that capital attraction was a big challenge when there were real or perceived infractions, corruption, lack of accountability, and other vices within the organisation seeking funding. Speaking further, he lauded the management of the NDDC for embarking on the Summit, describing it as “the start of a new dawn in making the Commission to retrace its steps back to the original objectives of its formation as an intervention agency for the development of the Niger Delta region.

    ”Wabote admitted that it was imperative for NDDC to explore innovative funding via PPPs as a credible option to meet the expanding developmental demands of the Niger Delta region, noting that the PPP arrangement brings corporate governance, technical expertise, and commercial acumen to enhance project delivery and successful operations. Wabote added, “From what I can see with the current management, a new dawn is in the horizon and I look forward to very exciting times at the Commission.”Several big wigs at the summit were open and candid in their goodwill messages. The former Governor of Edo State, Comrade Adams Oshiomole, commended the NDDC for admitting that it had suffered from goal displacement.

    He said: “The NDDC Management and the Board have shown courage by putting the Summit together. The NDDC has our prayers and support. What is missing is not the ideas, but the courage.”Oshiomhole advocated that the budget cycle of NDDC should be in line with the national budget. He advised the NDDC management to promote inclusive and sustainable development in the region.In another goodwill message, the former Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, acknowledged that things have changed for the better at the Commission and applauded the NDDC Board and Management for striving to leave legacies in the region.

    According to him, “the founding fathers of the NDDC intended that the NDDC should be a catalyst for development. The PPP arrangement is a new way of getting good results. There must be a fusion between the private sector and the public sector. It is important to bring in the resources and expertise of the private sector.” One of the participants from the international community, the founder and Chief Executive Officer of Miundo Misingi Hub, based in Nairobi, Kenya, Johnson Mwawasi Kilangi, applauded the NDDC management for putting together a summit to discuss how to deploy infrastructure assets and services with the private sector.According to Johnson, the summit came at a time when many countries are struggling to meet the ever-expanding infrastructure financing requirements, exacerbated by the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic.Johnson said that time was ripe for the region to leverage on private sector resources and innovation to develop qualify, affordable and sustainable infrastructure for the citizens.

  • FG will ensure development of oil host communities- NUPRC

    FG will ensure development of oil host communities- NUPRC

    The Federal Government(FG) has assured of its readiness to always ensure the all-round development of oil-producing host communities in the country as enshrined in the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

    Head of Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) Warri Regional Office, Olusegun Ogunnubi, gave the assurance in a statement on Thursday, in Warri, Delta State.

    He noted that the Host Community Development Trust fund (HCDT) created by the Petroleum Industry Act, gave the Commission the statutory obligation of ensuring the settlors, fund it for the concerned communities.

    “Through the Host Community Development Trust fund (HCDT), Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), will continue to ensure compliance from the settlors as regards their statutory responsibilities towards the concerned communities together in which 3% of their operating expenditure will be used to develop the communities,” he assured

    Read Also: FG postpones national award collection

    However, the NUPRC Regional Head asserted that if the concerned communities could not form a Trust Fund, the bulk of the funds would be used to develop projects defined by the communities.

    While commending stakeholders and communities in the state for their cooperation with the commission, he called for more support from the people of Ugborodo community, charging as well that the smooth-running of escravos operations must be ensured.

    Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse 111, assured of his readiness to always rally round the leadership of the NUPRC as led by the Chief Commission Executive, Engr. Gbenga Komolafe OFR FNSE, urging him and his team to see to the plight of the host communities.

    Atuwatse 111 made this known while playing host to the Head Warri Regional Office NUPRC and his team earlier in his palace at Warri.

    The monarch who called for transparency in their engagements with the people, stakeholders and the host communities, said he was optimistic that the NUPRC Warri Regional Office would succeed in its assignment.

    He urged the Commission to organize an enlarged parley of relevant stakeholders and the host communities for felt-needs assessment for the betterment of all.