Category: Niger Delta

  • Artisans urged to embrace contributory pension scheme

    Workers in the informal sector have been advised to save for retirement by joining the different pension schemes  in the country.

    The Managing Director of Sigma Pensions Limited, Mr Dave Uduanu,  gave this advice at a one-day human resources  conference  in Port Harcourt.

    Uduana organised the workshop for human resources managers in the Pensions Fund Administration from the Southsouth and Southeast.

    He said saving for retirement  would help people to enjoy their old age.

    Uduanu said it was not advisable for people to wait to mop up their lives’ savings at old age and begin to invest it in fishing or other sundry agricultural ventures wondering “what becomes of the person’s fate if the business fails.?”

    The Sigma Pensions Limited boss, who disclosed that Rivers, Edo and Delta, have joined Contributory Pension Scheme,  expressed hope that  Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom and Cross River would join soon because “we owe it as a service to ensure that states in the two geopolitical zones key into the pensions scheme”.

    Uduanu, who stated that his company is targeting about 500,000 workers in the two zones, also explained that the conference was organised “to build knowledge in human resources managers so that they could do their jobs better.”

    In a lead paper delivered at the event, the Head of Corporate Communications and Special Adviser to the Managing Director/ Chief Executive Officer of Indorama Eleme Petrochemicals, Dr Jossy Nkwocha, harped on the need for human resources managers to adopt tools that would bring in efficiency and increased productivity in organisations.

    In the paper titled: “Tools For Increased Personnel Efficiency and Productivity”, Nkwocha said that “there are 12 unmistakable tools of personnel efficiency and productivity” which are: robust human resources management policies and practices; workplace behaviour and corporate etiquette; technology and ICT as well as effective communication.

    Others are time management skills; employee engagement and communication; team building and goal setting; training, retraining certification; employees suggestion scheme; management by objectives; national and international laws and regulations and effective supervision, monitoring and control.

    He also told human resources managers that their functions basically include talent hunt and recruitment; staff training and staff welfare which involves housing, feeding, transportation and healthcare as well as promotion, disengagement and pensions of staff.

    In a paper titled “Wills and Trust”, Adaku Ijara of United Capital, Lagos lectured the participants on the importance of will, how to write and execute it when the time comes.

    The Rivers State Chairman of the Chartered Institute of Personnel Management, Mr Steve Ojeh, spoke on “Effective Performance Management System”, the Southsouth Coordinator of Pencom,  x-rayed “The Pension Industry in the Next Five Years.”

  • Bayelsa’s no-nonsense judge takes a bow

    Bayelsa’s no-nonsense judge takes a bow

    A High Court judge in Bayelsa State, Justice Margaret Akpomiemie, has retired. Akpomiemie was outstanding at the bench. As a rare female justice, she was firm, dedicated and known for some landmark judgments.

    As part of her last assignments for Bayelsa, she was given an appointment to head the the Judicial Commission of Enquiry established by Dickson to investigate persons behind the violence that marred the last governorship election in the state. The judge submitted her report to Dickson shortly before retirement.

    Little wonder, high personalities led by Governor Seriake Dickson, the governor’s cabinet members, notable persons in the judiciary, friends and families, converged recently to celebrate the end of her meritorious service as a judge.

    As part of activities marking her retirement from service, a book titled, “Selected Judgements of Justice Margaret Akpomiemie, was presented to the public at the Chief DSP Alamieyeseigha Memorial Banquet Hall, Government House, Yenagoa.

    All the speakers poured encomiums on the retired judge. Dickson, who is also a lawyer, described Akpomiemie as a thorough, firm and impartial Judge, whose contributions to the state Judiciary added value in the administration of justice.

    Dickson went down memory lane to narrate his encounter as a police a prosecutor with the retiring judge in old Rivers State. He said she gave her best in the discharge of her duties, which has earned her many accolades.

    The governor said that Akpomiemie exhibited exemplary qualities required of a judge, particularly in her fearless delivery of judgments bordering on criminal cases. He commended Akpomiemie for investing in the education of her children and called on society to emulate her example. Dickson said that education remains the bedrock of society.

    Congratulating Akpomiemie on her 20 years of successful career in the judiciary, Dickson wished her God’s protection and good health in her future endeavours.

    In his remarks, Chairman of the occasion, Retired Justice Francis Tabai of the Supreme Court of Nigeria, acknowledged the enormity of the task before a trial judge. He described the dispensation of justice at the High Court level as more demanding and critical adding that an error in judgement may not be corrected at the appellate level.

    Describing Akpomiemie as a distinguished jurist, Justice Tabai expressed appreciation to Dickson for his support to the judiciary and stressed the need for the appointment of more judges.

    In her key note address, Chief Judge of the state, Justice Kate Abiri, said Akpomiemie was known for her no-nonsense attitude and humility, lamenting that her retirement had created a vacuum in the state judiciary.

    In her remarks, Akpomiemie described her time in the judiciary as a fulfilling moment of her life and thanked persons who supported her through the years in the dispensation of justice for their encouragement.

    According to her decision to put some her landmark judgements in book form was informed by her desire to give back to a system that, gave the opportunity to showcase and practice what she loved.

    In their separate goodwill messages, Justice Lucky Boufini and Barrister Sunny Adolor, described Justice Akpomiemie as an amiable and calm woman, even in the face of provocation.

    The 441-page book was reviewed by Deputy Director General of the Nigeria Law School, Yenagoa Campus, Prof. Festus Emiri. Highpoints of the event were the unveiling and lunching of the book as well as the cutting of Justice Akpomiemie’s 65th birthday cake.

     

  • We pray these birds change our lives, say widows

    We pray these birds change our lives, say widows

    Some of the 500 widows empowered to become poultry farmers by wife of Governor Godwin Obaseki, Betsy, have expressed optimism that the 20, 000 birds given to them would make them become millionaires.

    Mrs. Obaseki, as part of activities to mark the International Women’s Day celebration, launched the “Edo Women for Agricultue Programme” in which she doled out 40 birds each to 500 widows after training them on how to rear birds. The 40 birds made up of 20 layers and 20 boilers.

    The beneficiaries described the gesture as a good omen in their lives as it would make them self sufficient as feeds were also given to them.

    One of the widows who gave her name as Juliet Aibangbee said she preferred the birds to money as she would now be engaged in productive venture. She said they were promised during the training programme that a ready market would be provided for their products.

    Another beneficiary, who simply gave her name as Mrs. Glory, said they were told the High breed birds do not die easily and were capable of laying five to six eggs daily.

    Plans to empower widows in the state began during the electioneering campaign of Obaseki when he promised to pay monthly stipend to 100 widows at the first instance. However, there was a change of plan to rather make the widows income earners by making them key into various agricultural initiatives of his administration.

    Speaking at the launch of the “Edo Women for Agricultue Programme”, Mrs. Obaseki said she observed that giving out monthly stipend would just be pocket money for the beneficiaries and such she advised that the money be invested on productive ventures for the widows with a view to ensuring food security.

    Mrs. Obaseki promised that any widow that successfully managed the 40 birds would be further empowered as the initiative was to boost the production capacity of rural women, tackle food shortages and poverty.

    She said the birds were special breed capable of laying five to six eggs daily and would ensure steady income for the widows.

    Her words: “I am not surprised my husband is seeking to collaborate with the church because when we were campaigning, my husband promised to select 100 widows for the next four years, and give them monthly stipend.

    “But I think it is better to empower the widows than to give them money. Therefore, we have developed an empowerment project for the widows by collaborating with Bank of Industry and Edo state will be lucky to be the pilot scheme.

    “We will create a revolution in rural poultry production that will increase productivity and income for rural women and empower them to transform access of poor households to source animal protein.

    “I brought the best company in poultry business to ensure food security. The demand for chicken and eggs is very high. We will create market for the widows to sell the birds.

    “After we succeed with this, we will extend it to thousands of women. I will churn out initiatives for women to have opportunities to be rich.

    “We are not doing politics, we are doing governance. Edo indigenes are allowed to join this administration. We will not behave like people with small minds. This is no time for politics.”

    Deputy Governor Philip Shaibu said the widows might have been expecting to go home with sewing machines, motorcycles and hair dressing machines, but the governor’s wife, working in line with All Progressives Congress (APC) change mantra gave them chickens, which they could rear and make money.

  • Bayelsa retains wrestling trophy

    Bayelsa State has won the Governor Dickson National Wrestling Classics for the second time. The state emerged victorious in the maiden edition of the competition last year.

    In the second edition, which took place recently at the Indoor Sports Hall of the Samson Siasia Sports Complex, Yenagoa, the Bayelsa Team was exceptionally rugged. It was a happy moment for residents of the state who trooped out en masse to cheer their team.

    Governor Seriake Dickson was in the crowd of spectators. He was elated that the trophy returned to the state, famous for wrestling. Even the Minister of Youths and Sports, Mr. Solomon Dalung, watched the event with excitement.

    Dickson called for synergy among the state government, the Federal Ministry of Sports and other interested partners in the sub-sector for the development of the State’s Sports Academy, Asoama in Kolokuma Opokuma Local Government Area.

    The Asoama Sports Academy is an integrated sporting educational facility conceived by the Dickson’s administration to harness the potential in sports by developing budding talents in the teeming population of youths in the state.

    Dickson described the sports facility as a centre for excellence. He said the partnership was crucial to enable youths excel in sporting and academic activities. He said the academy, which jus equipped with modern facilities, has the capacity to accommodate 1000 students.

    Dickson insisted that Bayelsa is a natural home of wrestling. He announced the state government’s plans to host the national wrestling tournament annually and also urged the state Ministry of Sports Development to organise state-wide wrestling competitions to fish out budding talents.

    The governor congratulated the participants in the wrestling competition and advocated the need to promote sports development as a viable platform for the mobilisation of youths for national development.

    In his remarks, the Minister of Youth and Sports, Dalung lauded the Dickson-led administration for its investments, not only in sports infrastructure, but also in sporting activities, especially in the areas of wrestling.

    Dalung identified sports as a veritable tool for the promotion of national integration, employment and wealth creation, noting that, sports could also be used to promote a healthy lifestyle.

    He said the Federal Government has a deliberate policy to involve the private sector in sports development. He charged state governments to key into the policy by promoting various sporting events in areas they have comparative advantage to make for easy management of sports in the country.

    Speaking at the inauguration of the Daniel Igali Recreation Centre in Yenagoa, President of the National Wrestling Federation and former Olympic Wrestling Gold medalist, Mr. Daniel Igali said the facility was provided to enable elite athletes train properly.

    He expressed the hope that in the next three months, the facility would secure accreditation from the International Wrestling Federation and attract internationally recognised coaches to train wrestlers at the facility.

    The winners of the various weight classes of the tournament, which featured competitions in Greco-Roman, Female and Male Free-style wrestling will represent Nigeria at the African Championship scheduled to hold later in the year in Marakesh, Morocco.

    Defending Champions, Bayelsa emerged victorious in the Greco-Roman, the Male and Female Free-style categories to retain the over-all trophy.

  • Benin Catholic Diocese lifts prison

    The Edo Command of the Nigerian Prisons  Service on Wednesday confirmed the receipt of  a generator and training items from the Catholic Archbishop of  Benin  Diocese,  Augustine Akubueze..

    The  command’s  Public Relations Officer, Mr Aminu Suleman, told  the News Agency of Nigeria in Benin that  Akubueze  made the donation on behalf of the diocese.

    He  said the donation  followed the request of the state Controller of Prison , Mr Amadin Osayande, requesting  for partnership with the diocese.

    Suleman  listed the items  donated to include  a  generating set, a set of HP desktop computer and IT camera  and a  Desktop Colour Printer.

    Others were   vehicle tyres, four industrial standing fans, a butterfly sewing machine  an office file cabinet and cash.

    ” The donation is in response to a request made to the Catholic Archbishop for his support in improving and enhancing the operational duties of the command.

    ” Part of the partnership request includes the training of inmates as well as  reformation and rehabilitation,” he said.

    The items, he added,  would enhance  effective service delivery in   the command.

    “These  items will also reduce the hardship faced due to poor power supply as well as facilitate the training of the inmates in skills acquisition,  especially in the area of tailoring,’’ he said.

    He called on the state government, NGOs and wealthy individuals to emulate the  gesture of the archbishop.

    `The Nigerian Prisons Service cannot achieve these alone without external support of well meaning Nigerians.

    ” We seek support for  the prisons service in its onerous task of humane and safe custody, inmates reformation as well as  rehabilitation and reintegration into the society,’’ he  said.

  • New Rivers nba division promises speedy dispensation of justice to grassroots

    To ensure that justice is not delayed or denied the people at the grassroots, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has opened a new branch in Okehi, Etche Local Government Area of Rivers State.

    Apart from making it possible for the rural people to access speedy dispensation of justice, the new branch would also help to build the capacity of lawyers and regularly update its members.

    Speaking at the opening ceremony of the NBA branch in Okehi, Mr Felix Amadi, the NBA Branch Chairman, stressed the importance of providing the right environment to enhance the administration of justice in all parts of the country.

    Amadi, who is also a law lecturer at the Rivers State University of Science and Technology, (RSUST), Port Harcourt , noted that the standard common room for lawyers at the Okehi High Court, which was also inaugurated, would serve as a temporary centre for the NBA branch in the division.

    Amadi said: “Having achieved this milestone, our next target is to commission an NBA secretariat or NBA house in Okehi. We will soon embark on this project and I am confident that we will accomplish it.”

    He also said it was necessary for the association to establish its presence in all judicial divisions in the country to boost the synergy between the bar and the bench.

    Highlighting the benefits of having a functional NBA centre in judicial divisions, Amadi said  the presence of the association would help to strengthen other institutions in the society.

    Justice Chioma Okirie, the Presiding Judge of the Okehi Judicial Division, expressed delight to be part of the epoch-making ceremony.

    Okirie also said the branch centre and the common room would provide the needed comfort and convenience for lawyers who come to appear in courts in the division.

    She advised members of the executive of the NBA branch to provide good leadership for lawyers in the area, adding that the value of the services of the association could not be over-emphasised.

    The Secretary of the NBA branch, Mr Sylvanus Nwankwo,  said the association in Okehi would enhance the administration of justice in the area.

     

  • Obaseki advises surveyors to keep to professional ethics

    Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo has advised surveyors in the country to adhere strictly to professional ethics in the discharge of their duties.

    Obaseki gave the advice on Wednesday while receiving members of the Edo chapter of Nigerian Institution of Surveyors (NIS) led by its state chairman, Mr Anthony Ekhator, in Benin.

    The governor decried situations where some surveyors gave approvals for erection of structures under high-power tension line and unauthorised places in the state.

    “There are series of approvals from surveyors; people building under high-power tension line have approvals from your professional colleagues, saying it is okay.

    “We have to look inward; I have a case where we refused to approve a plan for someone to build a petrol station in a housing estate.

    “But immediately the Adams Oshiomhole-led administration was over, the person smuggled the application back and got approval.

    “When we perpetuate this level of corruption, we are hurting ourselves.

    “It is our collective responsibility to build the state; as a government, we have the capacity and interest to make the state to work again,’’ he said.

    Obaseki said his administration was ready to re-direct things in the state, and was currently mapping out landmarks to produce the state master plan.

    “We need to draft a law to put clarity on mapping and Geographic Information System.

    “We have to start our planning process, because we need the data to develop a master plan and attract businesses to the state.

    “We have the will, but we need your professional support to set the standards and get things done rightly,’’ the governor said.

    Obaseki used the occasion to invite the institution to a workshop to be organised by the state government on infrastructure development and town planning.

    Ekhator, chairman of the institution, said the visit was to seek collaboration with the state government in determining and restoring the state`s assets.

  • Cross River among states with highest bus fares in February

    Residents of Abuja, Cross River and Adamawa paid the highest bus fares than their counterparts around the country in February, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said in a report.

    The comparison is based on the latest report by the NBS’ Transport Fare Watch in February, which covers bus journey within the city, intercity and state per drop on constant routes.

    It also covers charge per person; air fare charge for specified routes, single journey, journeys by motorcycles (okada) per drop and water way passenger transport.

    The report said that an Abuja resident paid an average of N257 for bus journey within the city in February.

    ‘‘Average fare paid by commuters for bus journey within the city increased by 0.01 per cent month-on-month and by 50.42 per cent year-on-year to N122.85 in February from N122.83 in January.

    ‘‘States with highest bus journey fare within city in February were Abuja N257.50, Cross River N223.33 and Adamawa N200.

    ‘‘The States with lowest bus journey fare within city in February were Borno N68.75, Yobe N60 and Plateau N78.57.’’

    The report stated that average fare paid by commuters for bus journey intercity dropped by 1.31 per cent month-on-month and increased by 26.00 per cent year-on-year to N1, 411.87 in February from N1430.63 in January.

    It added that states with highest bus journey within city in February 2017 were Abuja N4, 566.67, Adamawa N3, 350.00 and Niger N2,337.50.

    The report, however, said that the states with lowest bus journey fare within city were Kano N850.00, Ebonyi N750 and Abia N683.33.

    ‘‘Average fare paid by air passengers for specified routes single journey dropped by 0.24 per cent month-on-month and increased by 27.34 per cent year-on-year to N30,718.10 in February from N30,793.43 in January.

    ‘‘States with highest air fare in the month were Edo N40,000, Borno N35,878 and Cross River N35,758 while states with lowest air fare were Kano N25,227.56, Kaduna N23,308.48 and Katsina N21,000.

    ‘‘Average fare paid by commuters for journey by motorcycle per drop dropped by 0.31 per cent month-on-month and increased by 24.53 per cent year-on-year to N93.93 in February from N94.22 in January.’’

    Meanwhile, the report said that states with highest journey fare by motorcycle per drop in February were Rivers N152.50, Abia N151.25 and Edo N150.83.

    It further said that the states with lowest journey fare by motorcycle per drop in the month were Ekiti N53.67, Zamfara N54.09 and Niger N58.00.

    According to the report, average fare paid by passengers for water way passenger transport dropped by 3.84 per cent month-on-month.

    It stated that the fare increased by 19.29 per cent year-on-year to N569.68 from to N592.68.

    ‘‘States with highest fare by water way passenger transport in February were Bayelsa N1,933.33, Delta N1,633.33 and Cross River N1,700.00.

    ‘‘The states with lowest fare by water way passenger transport in February 2017 were kebbi N220.00, Gombe N150.00 and Borno N117.89,’’ it added.

  • Bonny Island’s dearest

    Bonny Island’s dearest

    Shell was the first to see the light in Bonny Island. Mobil saw it later. The Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited saw it over two decades ago when work started on Africa’s largest LNG plant. They all liked the place and the promise there. The Federal Government, which has interest in all of these ventures, too knows what the country stands to gain from Bonny Island, which hosts the country’s only port of origin.

    Of these companies in Bonny, NLNG seems dearest to the indigenes. It is their pride. Through it, they enjoy uninterrupted power supply, among other dividends. For Nigeria, it is both our pride and cash-cow.

    You will understand better what NLNG means to Nigeria if you listened to Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Group Managing Director (GMD) Dr. Maikanti Baru  a few days back on an NTA programme.

    To Baru, the Bonny NLNG is one of the biggest success stories of the oil and gas industry. This company, which came on stream in 1995, Baru said, has generated $90 billion revenue, $30 billion dividends and contributed four per cent to the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    The model, which made NLNG a success, is, however, under threat from the National Assembly, which believes it must amend its enabling law for the sake of nothing tangible.

    Baru believes this move against the NLNG Act has dampened the optimism of investors in the industry.

    “The review of the NLNG Act by the National Assembly is causing a challenge for the Federal Government and the IOCs and it is sending wrong signals to the international community about how business is done in the country,” he said.

    The NLNG has been a darling and should be allowed to remain so. Let me cite this particular example: When President Muhammadu Buhari came in, the Federal Government initiated a bailout package for states owing their workers. The bulk of the money which made up the N400 billion package came from proceeds from the Bonny Island, Finima, Rivers State-based company.

    This darling, which was incorporated some 30 years ago but its first cargo of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) did not leave the Bonny Port until ten years later, rose so fast that it became the fourth largest supplier of LNG. The company, whose six-train plant produces about 22 Metric Tonnes Per Annum (mtpa) of LNG for export and five MTPA of Natural Gas Liquids (NGLS), has made over $25 billion from a $2.6 billion investment. The company has also paid over $5.5billion as Companies Income Tax, Tertiary Education Tax, WHT, VAT and PAYE. Regulators’ levies and other fees have led to the company coughing out over N51billion.

    The NLNG has six-train plant worth over $15 billion. It operates six liquefaction units (LNG trains) producing 22 million metric tonnes of LNG per year (mmtpa). Trains 1, 2 and 3 have production capacities of 3.2 mmtpa, whilst trains 4, 5 and 6 have capacities of 4.1 mmtpa each. The Final Investment Decision (FID) on the train 7 has not yet been made. This upper-cut about to be delivered by the National Assembly seems to have put that in abeyance.

    The NLGN owns some 30 ships. It used to be 24 until six additional ships were delivered by Samsung and Hyundai dockyards. Through its second subsidiary, the NLNG Ship Manning Limited (NSML), the NLNG is the biggest employer of Nigerian seafarers on board its 13 LNG carrier ships. Also, the company has a wholly-owned subsidiary set up in 1989, Bonny Gas Transport (BGT) Limited, which provides shipping services for NLNG. The BGT was set up in Bermuda with an ordinary equity holding from NLNG Limited and preferential equity holding from the sponsors, NLNGs shareholders. Another wholly owned subsidiary of NLNG Limited is the NSML, which was set up in 2008 to provide, develop and manage high-calibre personnel for NLNGs maritime business.

    Former Coordinating Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala visited the NLNG Plant on Bonny Island, Rivers State on November 15, 2013. She described the NLNG as an asset to Nigeria, a shining example of a successful company and a beacon of hope for a better Nigeria. The minister alluded to the fact that NLNGs financial book was an enviable balance sheet and that told the success stories.

    Dr. Okonjo-Iweala described the NLNG as the most successful Nigerian company with 49 per cent government ownership, which she described as a distinguishing feature among companies in the public and private sector.

    The Federal Government, represented by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) owns 49 per cent. Shell Gas BV (SGBV) controls 25.6 per cent. Total LNG Nigeria Limited owns 15 per cent and Eni International 10.4 per cent.

    The NLNG story could be better if its expansion plans sail through. The failure to take the final investment decision on its Train Seven has made it lose its pre-eminence in the global LNG market. There are imminent fears it will still dip further if its expansion plans are not concretised soon. And now the National Assembly has thrown spanner in the works.

    As at the time it celebrated the export of its 3000th cargo on January 6, 2015, a large expanse of land, close to its Train Six in Finima, Bonny Island, was waiting for further action to house the Seventh Train of the plant. But years after work began on sand-filling of the site, there is no definite decision on when real construction work would start. As a result of this, the NLNG, once the fastest growing facility in the world, has lost grounds to Qatar and Australia. Qatar has moved its output from 20 million metric tonnes to 80 million metric tonnes. Australia, from its previous 20 metric tonnes, now churns out 81 metric tonnes annually. NLNG is stuck at 22 million metric tonnes. Australia has 10 LNG projects, with 20 trains and $215 billion worth of final investment decision. Yet, Australia has only 60 percent of Nigeria’s gas reserves. Nigeria has gas reserves estimated at over 160 trillion cubic feet. The United States (U.S.), formerly a major LNG export destination, is now a net LNG exporter.

    The seventh train of the NLNG plant will bring in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) estimated at over $8 billion, help reduce flared gas and improve the country’s revenue profile. With Train 7, the NLNG, said industry watchers, would provide about 10,000 jobs. Since it opened shop in Bonny, NLNG Limited has provided over 2,000 jobs each construction year and 18,000 jobs at the peak of construction. The government, they said, will also reap an additional $2.2 billion annually in dividend.

    What really does the National Assembly have against the NLNG Act? The National Assembly is trying to end the company’s status as dollar denominated, which was agreed on to protect the company against Naira’s flip-flop. The National Assembly also seeks to make its subsidiary, Bonny Gas Transport Company, pay tax in Nigeria. It also plans to make NLNG pay three per cent of its annual revenue to the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), pay three per cent of gross freight on international inbound and outbound cargo to NIMASA, pay two per cent of contracts performed by companies engaged in cabotage and pay one per cent of any contract award upstream to the government.

    This Act under threat is a contract between the Federal Government and the NLNG shareholders. The thrusts of this contract include incentives, concessions, guarantees and assurances, which were reaffirmed in Letters of Assurance to lenders for the Nigeria LNG Trains 4 and 5 expansions by the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Justice and the Central Bank.

    The incentives, concessions, guarantees and assurances are not uncommon in the global LNG industry. They are used in countries, such as Qatar, Oman, Malaysia, Angola and others to support and grow their LNG plants. The guarantees are to assure foreign investors that their investments will be protected.

    What those asking NLNG to pay the NDDC Levy seems to have forgotten is that the levy is aimed at upstream oil and gas producers. NLNG does not produce gas. It buys gas from producers and liquefies it. If it pays the levy, it amounts to the government taking money twice for the same purpose; one from the producer and two, from the client. The NDDC pursued the matter up to the Supreme Court and it lost.

    These alterations planned by the National Assembly are against the guarantees and assurances Nigeria entered into with the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and others. The National Assembly needs to forget its feeling that the NLNG is enjoying a rare privilege. Firms in free trade zones enjoy almost absolute exemptions from taxes and levies. NLNG enjoys partial exemptions. Since 2010, it started paying Companies Income Tax, because its exemption from this expired in 2009.

    My final take: The National Assembly needs to let the NLNG be. Two, the Federal Government must work on the NLNG’s offer to support the government with N60 billion for the completion of the Bonny-Bodo Road. I see NLNG as our treasure and with its credit rating among international financier better than Nigeria’s, what other choice do I have? This move by the National Assembly is not new. Past sessions of the National Assembly also tried but the efforts were halted when their negative implications became apparent. The time to stop is now.

  • When truth can’t set you free

    He broke my heart but I did not cry. Why should I cry? I am a Nigerian.  We are hardly shocked.  Here, our elites deprive the people of the opportunity to enjoy the fruits of their labour. Here, contracts are awarded on paper, money approved and taken but nothing to show for it. Here, money that could build a whole country or countries, from scratch, is stolen by one person who obviously suffers from psychiatric disorder. In my language, we call such people were alaso.

    Here, we sell nonsense as sense. Here, our leaders treat us as if we do not matter. Here, projects are completed on paper, yet the reality is walls apart. Here, projects that have not started at all have been paid for and will never be done. Here, we accept the absurd as our ways of doing things. After all, this is Naija, we are quick to tell ourselves.

    These shocking facts were expounded by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo and he broke my heart. Not because he spoke the truth, but because the truth will still not set free the people of Niger Delta on whose soil he spoke on Monday in Benin City, the Edo State capital.

    Osinbajo said we must find a way out. When he said this, what came to my mind was President Muhammadu Buhari’s statement that “we must kill corruption if we don’t want corruption to kill us”. For a region rich in resources, but with some of the poorest people this side of the globe, the Niger Delta situation is pathetic.

    As he tours the Niger Delta, he has expounded these truths. From Rivers to Bayelsa to Akwa Ibom and Edo, Osinbajo has not failed to bare it all. Still, the people are helpless. No thanks to poverty, they still pander to the whims of their oppressors who even give them guns to kill one another during elections.

    The mess the Niger Delta has found itself started in Oloibiri in 1956. The people were happy– thinking their town would soon become London. Any voice of dissent, any voice of reasoning was shut down. And years down the line, they felt they had listened.

    The Oloibiri story resonates all over the Niger Delta, which extends to over 70,000 square kilometres and constitutes about 7.5 per cent of Nigeria’s land mass. The densely populated area comprises Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Edo; Akwa Ibom and Rivers states. It extends to parts of Ondo, Imo and Abia states.

    This troubled region is home to over 31 million people and is the oil and gas-producing belt. Since the discovery of oil in commercial quantity in Oloibiri, the region has been embroiled in controversies, agitation and protests over the attendant oil spills, devastating pollution of fishing zones and sources of potable water and ecological degradation.

    Over the years, the people have lived in conditions that are intolerable. From time to time, gross neglect and under-development snowballs into pockets of protests and agitation for resource control because successive administrations at the centre and in some states glossed over sustainable development of the region.

    While other regions were being developed in infrastructure and human capital, the reverse was the case in the Niger Delta. No wonder there has been a debate on whether oil exploration is a curse or a blessing to the region.

    Bottled resentment as a result of the status quo has been blamed for vandalism of oil and gas pipelines and kidnappings for ransom. As can be seen in the film Oloibiri, the youths thought violence could help and before they knew it, they became killers, spilling blood here and there.

    The enactment of the Mineral Ordinance by Nigeria’s first Governor-General Sir Frederick Luggard in 1914 signalled the exploration and exploitation of the country’s mineral resources, especially oil and gas.

    In 1937, the British colonial government gave the exclusive rights of exploration and exploitation to Shell D’Arcy, which could not actualise this mandate because of the Second World War. In 1938, Shell entered into collaboration with British Petroleum (formerly Anglo-Persian Oil Company) for oil prospection in Nigeria.

    Their early efforts yielded 450 barrels of crude oil in Akata I Well, in 1951. Further successes were made in Oloibiri in 1956 and Bomu Oil Field in 1958 when oil was struck in commercial quantity.

    Many major players in the global oil sector were later granted prospecting licences. Such players include Socony Vacuum (now Mobil) in 1955, Tennessee (later Tennenco) in 1960, Gulf Oil (now Chevron) in 1961, American Overseas (later Amoseas) in 1961, Agip Oil in 1962, Safrap (now ELF Phillips) in 1965 and Esso in 1965.

    Shell, Mobil, Chevron, ELF, Agip and Texaco were major players in the oil sector. Others, such as Ashland, Deminex, Pan Ocean, British Gas, Sun Oil, Conoco, Statoil, BP and Chemical Oil Company (now Conoil), played minimal roles.

    In collaboration with Shell, the Federal Government set up the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Limited (NLNG) with a plant at Finima, Bonny Island to enable it maximise its revenue from oil prospecting and reduce gas flaring. The country has earned several millions of dollars in revenue from the NLNG.

    In spite of these efforts to increase the extraction of both oil and gas from wells and fields located in the region and consequently shore up gross revenue earnings, the peoples of the Niger Delta have tales of deprivation and neglect to tell.

    A large proportion of the country’s poor lives in the Niger Delta where the exploration and exploitation of oil and gas has created sorry sites and sights of oil spills and distorted bio-diversity.

    The situation has often given rise to non-violent and violent protestations. These include the initial 12-Day Revolution in the Creeks in 1967, which was championed by the trio of Isaac Adaka Boro, Samuel Owonaru and Nothingham Dick, in a failed bid to secede from Nigeria.

    There were other protests and agitations by groups, such as the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), led by the late Ken Saro-Wiwa who was killed by the Gen. Sani Abacha Administration and activities of groups, such as the Ogba Solidarity, the Urhobo Progressive Union, the Niger Delta Environmental Forum, the Chikoko Movement, the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth, the Ijaw National Congress, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) and the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Force led by Mujahid Asari Dokubo.

    As a result of the recommendations of the Henry Willink Commission of Inquiry set up by the British colonial government on September 26, 1957 that the Niger Delta people were “poor, backward and neglected” and should be on the concurrent list as a “special area” needing special attention, the government established the Niger Delta Development Board (NDDB).

    The board was assigned the responsibility of managing the challenges and the socio-economic development of the new special areas of Yenagoa Province, Degema Province, Ogoni Division of Port Harcourt Province and the Western Ijaw Division of Delta Province.

    It existed for seven years  between 1960 and 1967 until it was replaced by a Presidential Task Force Committee that was set up by the then President Shehu Shagari in 1980.

    Another major attempt to address the issues challenging the development of the Niger Delta was the constitution of the Oil Mineral-Producing Areas Development Commission (OMPADEC) in 1992 by the Gen. Ibrahim Babangida Administration.

    Other interventions came in forms of panels, until December 21, 2000 when the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) was set up by ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo to “offer a lasting solution to the socio-economic difficulties of the Niger Delta” and further facilitate the “rapid, even and sustainable development of the Niger Delta that is economically prosperous, socially stable, economically regenerative and politically peaceful.”

    So far, the interventionist agency has made some strides in the areas of infrastructure development and human capital development. But, at many points, its affairs have been dogged by internal feuds and opposing blocs of influence over control of its operation. Many of those who are statutorily meant to give it money to lessen the region’s burden are failing in their responsibility.

    My final take: Going by the Bible, the truth should set people free once known. The people of the Niger Delta know the truth but unfortunately it has not set them free. Poverty has ensured they worship their tormentors; poverty has ensured they beg for crumbs from those stealing their commonwealth; poverty has turned them to beggars; and like true beggars, they seem to have no choice.