Category: Niger Delta

  • ‘Rivers yet to get Fed Govt’s N78b refund’

    ‘Rivers yet to get Fed Govt’s N78b refund’

    By Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

    Rivers State on Wednesday debunked insinuations it received the N78 billion refund from the Federal Government.

    Commissioner for Information and Communications Paulinus Nsirim said there was a difference between approval and release of funds.

    Nsirim, in a statement by his media aide, Soibi Max-Alalibo said: “As at today, the government is yet to receive the N78 billion. There is so much misconception out there but there is a difference between approval and release of funds.

    Read Also: Rivers Assembly approves N18b loan for state

    “When the money is released it cannot be a secret because such information cannot be hidden in government circles.

    “If the money is received today, it will be made public. So, peddling propaganda that the money has been received by mischief makers is unfortunate.”

    Nsirim disagreed with persons demanding to know why the government opted for a fresh loan despite the N78 billion refund expected from the Federal Government, saying ‘you cannot plan with what you do not have’.

    But he assured the people the money would be spent judiciously.

  • Community accuses elders of embezzling N100m

    Community accuses elders of embezzling N100m

    By Elo Edremoda, Warri

    There is tension in Ugbolokposo community in Uvwie Local Government of Delta State, following alleged misappropriation of N100 million by ‘few elders’.

    Chief Benson Anoemuaghan and Emma Atseruboma – in a petition to the Olu of Warri, Ogiame Ikenwoli, accused a prominent chief of planning to ‘seize, intimidate and forcefully install an unpopular leadership in the once peaceful Ugbolokposo’.

    The petitioners appealed to Ikenwoli to prevent the crisis in the peaceful community.

    “Community executives had always been drawn from the various quarters to ensure fairness and equity. But the reverse is now the case since our best hands are not being projected to take the community to the next level, due to the external unholy interference from the chief in question.”

    Read Also: Rivers community beg Wike to reopen shut hospital

    Anoemuaghan and Atseruboma said their December 16, 2019, letter, which bordered on the leadership tussle and embezzled fund, was ‘sat upon’ by vested interests.

    Both demanded ‘a detailed explanation of perceived financial misappropriation of a N100 million from Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) paid in 2017.

    “This has been the real issue tearing the community apart. The N100 million was awarded to us in a judgment against SPDC. The community only got to know about the money in 2019 after the same elders collected it without recourse to the community.

    “It took the intervention of some of us to arrest the crises that would have happened when the news got to the community and people asked for how the money was spent.

    “Not a kobo was brought to the community and attempts to get to the root of this issue have been resisted. We require your intervention in this regard to ensure justice is not only done, but seen to have been done to all parties.”

  • Community begs Wike to reopen hospital

    Community begs Wike to reopen hospital

    By Mike Odiegwu, Port Harcourt

    Residents of Ngo community in Andoni Local Government of Rivers State have appealed to Governor Nyesom Wike to reopen their general hospital, which was shut in February owing to insecurity.

    President of the National Union of Andoni Students (NUAS) Efuk Festus, during a tour of the hospital on Wednesday, lamented that the facility had been overtaken by weed and rodents.

    Read Also: Wike dissolves taskforce, sacks aide

    It was gathered doctors posted fled the area following insecurity, especially kidnapping.

    Festus said: “Our general hospital has been locked since February; grasses have overtaken it and it is sad because the people cannot access medical help when they fall ill.

    “We beg Governor Wike to reopen the facility because our people are suffering. This is the seventh month this hospital has been shut, we heard doctors have been posted here but we are yet to see them.”

    Efforts to reach the Commissioner for Health, Prof. Princewill Chike, were unsuccessful as he did not respond to calls and text messages sent to his phone.

  • Bayelsa promises teachers prompt salary

    Bayelsa promises teachers prompt salary

    By Simon Utebor, Yenagoa

    Bayelsa State has assured primary school teachers the Douye Diri administration will pay their salaries promptly.

    Deputy Governor Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo spoke when he met with chairmen, vice chairmen and other principal officers of the eight local governments.

    He directed officials of the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) to liaise with the councils to remove bottlenecks causing delays in payment of teachers, a statement by his media aide, Doubara Atasi, said on Wednesday.

    Ewhrudjakpo said reports showed primary school teachers get their salaries one or two weeks after other council workers.

    Read Also: Bayelsa commissioners list ready, says Diri

    He said: “I hear that primary teachers get their salaries late, usually one or two weeks after other council workers have got theirs.

    “I am not sure it is the fault of the chairmen because the report I have says money gets to the councils late and so the councils pay late. This is in addition to complaints from the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) that their general dues don’t get to them.

    ‘’We need to address this so that teachers can also get their salaries on time.”

    To check fraudulent practices, the deputy governor set up a committee, headed by the Chief of Staff, Government House, Benson Agadaga, to ascertain the grade levels and steps of  primary school workers.

    The committee has three weeks to submit its report. It would also scrutinise the nominal rolls and payment schedules of the eight councils.

  • Late A’Ibom APC Chairman wasn’t in our facility – IBH

    Late A’Ibom APC Chairman wasn’t in our facility – IBH

    By Bassey Anthony, Uyo

    The Management of the Ibom Multispecialty Hospital(IBH), Uyo has said the deceased Akwa Ibom chapter chairman of the All Progressives Congress(APC), Ini Titus Okopido was not in its facility.

    A top member of the APC had informed the Nation the party’s chairman died at the ISH from multiple organ failure.

    Read Also: A’Ibom APC chairman dies

    But in a statement signed by the Chief Medical Director of ISH, Professor E. E. Ekanem and the Director of Administration, Mr. T. T. Ikpe, the management of hospital said the late Okopido was not admitted, let alone die in the hospital.

    “While we mourn the death of the great son of Akwa Ibom, we state that he was neither managed nor died at the Ibom Multi-Specialty Hospital. It is therefore our request that this information be corrected accordingly,” the statement said.

  • How to recover Post COVID-19, by PIND

    How to recover Post COVID-19, by PIND

    Our Reporter

    Executive Director of Foundation for Partnership Initiative in the Niger Delta (PIND), Dara Akala, has stated the Niger Delta region needs innovative approaches to skills development that will contribute to economic and growth post COVID-19 pandemic.

    Akala said unemployment is probably the most significant development challenge for government at national and sub-national levels, including the Niger Delta region as the world battles with the COVID-19 pandemic.

    He stated this during a virtual roundtable with the theme: “Re-imagining youth skills development programme and job creation for positive impact in post-COVID-19 economy” by the Foundation.

    He attributed lack of access to economic activities to unemployment in the Niger Delta, which according to him, is a driver of conflict and youth restiveness in the region.

    “As a matter of fact, the region has recorded some of the highest rates of unemployment in the country and in 2018 for example, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Akwa Ibom State reported the highest rate of unemployment,” the PIND Foundation Executive Director said.

    “This stood at 37.7 per cent, followed by Rivers State with 36.4 per cent, Bayelsa 32.6 percent and Abia State 31.6 percent and so on and forth. And this was before the advent of COVID-19 pandemic.”

    Quoting the International Labour Organisation (ILO), Akala said COVID-19 has been described as the most severe crisis since World War 11.

    He added with a 30.4 per cent economic shrink in Nigeria this year as projected by International Monetary Fund (IMF), the jobless rate already at an average of about 23 per cent is expected to climb even higher.

    The Niger Delta region would not be left out of this worsening unemployment situation, he said.

    Speaking on the intervention by PIND to address youth unemployment, he stated it came up with Niger Delta Youth Employment Pathway (NDYEP) in 2017.

    “This project that we started in 2017 to address the issues of youth job readiness, work force development and jobs creation are being piloted in three states of Abia, Akwa Ibom and Rivers.

    “We focus on few sectors that were pre-selected: ICT is one of them and renewables, construction, agriculture and other emerging growth sectors showing potential for youth employment,” Akala explained.

    According to him: “In the pilot phase, NDYEP has enrolled and delivered short-term technical, soft skills training and job/enterprise linkages to over 4,500 youth while over 1,300 youth who successfully completed the program have been supported to transition into internship placements, waged employment and entrepreneurship/self-employment.”

    He explained that NDYEP is an innovative model designed not just to train but prepare youths living in the rural areas but also women and persons living with disability with market relevant skills for securing sustainable jobs.

    On the motives behind the roundtable, Akala disclosed that meeting was organized by PIND with support from Ford Foundation to share the key features and learning from the NDYEP model and seek collaboration for demand driven job creation programming with state governments in the Niger Delta towards addressing prevalent youths’ unemployment in the region.

    He said the Foundation sought to build knowledge and understanding on current approaches towards youth skills development and regional action to address post-COVID-19 youth unemployment dynamics.

    Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on job creation and youth employment, Afolabi Imuokhuede, stressed it takes a collective effort of all stakeholders within the region, government and others to tackle the challenges of addressing unemployment in Nigeria and the Niger Delta.

    Director General of the BRACED Commission, Joe Keshi, asked policymakers to step up and address the most important challenges like unemployment and the growth of the private sector especially as the world enters the fourth industrial revolution.

     

     

  • ‘Why oil producing communities risk further environmental degradation’

    ‘Why oil producing communities risk further environmental degradation’

    Frank Ikpefan, Abuja

    States and communities outside the Niger Delta where oil and gas deposits have been found in commercial quantities in recent times will experience the same extensive environmental damage as the region if current legislative and institutional structures are not reviewed.

    This was one of the major areas of consensus reached at a two-day webinar organised by the National Coalition on Gas flaring and Oil spills in the Niger Delta (NACGOND) to examine urgent issues around the escalating incidence of oil spills with regard to their impact on the environment and the long-term socio-economic health.

    The theme of the event in which over seventy media and civil society representatives from across the country participated was “National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) Amendment Bill (2018): Framing Pathways to Presidential Assent”.

    Participants focused on the urgent need for presidential assent to the Bill that will give additional powers and jurisdiction to NOSDRA, as the country’s major environmental regulator so that it can deal effectively with current and future oil spill incidents, including those outside the Niger Delta.

    The serious environmental plight of the Niger Delta is underscored by the fact that there are over 2, 000 oil spills in different parts of the region, which have not yet been cleaned.

    The presentations by two environmental scholar-activists – Dr Tubodenyefa Zibima of the Political Science Department of Niger Delta University and Dr Sam Kabari of the Centre for Environment, Human Rights and Development (CEHRD)- analysed the specific reasons for the President’s initial refusal to sign off on the bill, which include sections of the bill usurping the powers of the Minister for Petroleum Resources; conflicting roles and responsibilities of designated regulatory agencies in the oil and gas sector; and concerns that the financial implications of the legislation will over-burden the industry.

    READ ALSO: NDDC, Niger Delta Affairs ministry and gross untruths

    It was agreed passage of the NOSDRA Bill should be a critical priority for the country because the lack of a fully empowered agency to manage oil spills is the major cause of the environmental damage that has defined the operations of the industry since the first oil find at Oloibiri, Bayelsa State in 1958.

    According to Father Edward Obi, Convener of the webinar: “Other countries which have effective mechanisms for tackling oil spills have fully empowered and resourced institutions to take charge of this important responsibility. Nigeria cannot be different. We need a NOSDRA with adequate teeth to do its job”.

    It will be recalled the previous effort to make the legislation a reality was truncated as President Muhammadu Buhari declined assent after the two chambers of the national Assembly had passed it.

    The current NOSDRA Act gives the agency responsibility for “surveillance and enforcing compliance with “all existing environmental legislation and the detection of oil spills in the petroleum sector.”

    But the agency is hamstrung because it has no powers to deal with some categories of spills and it has to depend on the equipment and logistics of the oil companies it regulates to access and remediate certain sites and spills.

  • NDDC Acting MD’s aide resigns

    NDDC Acting MD’s aide resigns

    By Jide Orintunsin, Abuja

    The Senior Special Assistant, Special Duties 1, to embattled acting Managing Director of Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) Prof. Kemeberadikumo Pondei has resigned.

    Olomu B. Micheal, in a letter dated 20th July 2020, appreciated the acting MD for appointing him.

    He said the decision to bow out of the commission was in his best interest.

    The statement reads: “I wish to formally inform you of my decision to resign as Senior Special Assistant Special Duties 1, following my appointment with effect from the 2nd Day of March, 2020.

    “In executing the responsibilities of my office, I have in my best capacity served the interest of the Commission and carried out my obligations to her diligently.

    “I have resolved that it is in my best interest to take a bow at this point in time.

    “I wish to appreciate you for the privilege of service provided me and I wish the Commission all the best as I move forward in my sojourn of life.

    “Be assured of my highest esteem and regards always.”

  • LALA foundation donates relief materials to Bayelsa community

    LALA foundation donates relief materials to Bayelsa community

    Our Reporter

    A non-governmental organisation, Learning and Life Aid foundation (LALA), has donated relief materials to residents of Oyobu clan in Opokuma(KOLGA) Bayelsa state.

    The group also educated about 100 families during the sensitisation and advocacy programme.

    The sensitisation was carried out in Izon language on COVID-19 pandemic.

    Some of the palliatives donated include tubers of yam, cartoons of noodles, bags of rice, face masks and hand sanitisers.

    LALA founder, Lilian Alaere Ebifegha, an illustrious daughter of the community, said the gesture to support efforts of the state and federal government in cushioning socio-economic effects of the pandemic.

    “The effect of COVID-19 is greatly felt in all corners of the world. The novel virus has brought untold hardship to the people of the community in particular, especially the elderly ones as well as widows and orphans.

    ‘’Our mission is to assist in every possible ways while also calling on the government and well-meaning Nigerians to key into the vision of the foundation which is, ‘Advancing world peace, as well as well-being at all levels – individual, family, tribal, national, and world,” she explained.

    One of the board members of the Foundation, Alfred Okubo, explained that data of all households in the community had been collected to guide the assignment.

    He further assured continuous efforts will be made to ensure the community gets assistance from the foundation.

    Beneficiaries expressed satisfaction with the programme, showing the campaign was successful.

    An elder, who represented the community, thanked the foundation for consistent demonstration of love as well as the zeal and sacrifice with which they executed the charity campaign.

    Ebifegha acknowledged efforts from members of the foundation, who assisted in distribution of the palliatives.

    .

  • The Bridge leadership foundation charts paths for new chapter

    The Bridge leadership foundation charts paths for new chapter

    Our Reporter

    The needs for individuals, businesses and nations to develop mindsets required to function sustainably in a post COVID-19 world were reinforced at the 10th annual career day conference of The Bridge Leadership Foundation (TBLF) last weekend.

    The conference with the theme “The Global Economy: Adapting to the new normal” held virtually.

    The array of renowned thought leaders took turns to discuss issues ranging from economy, policy and politics, education, agriculture, business growth, finance to technology, global markets, health and the creative industry.

    Founder of the foundation, Senator Liyel Imoke, said the COVID-19 challenges have increased its resolve to provide the platform for young people to actualise their potentials irrespective of the challenges, times or seasons.

    He said they must learn to adapte and adjust accordingly to the challenges of the times.

    He said, those who will survive this revolution are those who can adapt, adjust, rethink and redesign their approaches and ideas to problems on day-to-day basis.

    The lead speaker, Mrs. Ndidi Nwuneli, who is Managing Partner, Sahel Consulting and Founder, LEAP Africa, hinted challenges facing Nigerians are mainly health, economic, social and emotional related.

    She said while COVID-19 had pushed the nation into the 4th economic revolution, youths are credible and resilient and can be more productive, if given the right support and accountability matrix to function.

    She recommended that adult literacy training should be fast incorporated into the religious communities.

    READ ALSO: APC chieftain launches foundation

    Nwuneli also called for a broad-based collaboration to empower children to read, appreciate life, have hope and create community centres where young people can learn and get equipped.

    CEO, Gemstone Group, Fela Durotoye, spoke on leading in uncertainty. He said there was a need to find courage to do what is necessary and build the resilience required to get the desired results in spite of any challenge or crisis.

    He also encouraged professionals to build their capacity and possess the right work attitude that will increase the chances of keeping their jobs or works.

    Speaking on “New Decade, New Economy, New Solutions were Naadiya Moosaje – cofounder of women in engineering based in south Africa, Hamzat Lawal- founder of connected development and Yomi Williams – founder of Gartner Callaway Group of Companies called for skills development, policy and women inclusion, good governance and politics and sustainable agricultural growth along the value chain respectively.

    The panel discussion was moderated by J.J. Omojuwa who remarked that COVID-19 is fast tracking us into the future.

    Other speakers were: Peter Obi, Mitchel Elegbe, Tonye Cole, Alibaba, Ubong King, Thelma Ekiyor, Saudat Salami, Babajide Ipaye and Bukky Asehinde.

    The Foundation called on concerned individuals, organisations and partners to join the quest to realise it’s goals.

    The 10th career day was supported by NorthWest Petroleum and Gas Company, Dangote, Lilleker, Levene Energy, Stanbic IBTC, and Ben Akak Foundation.