Tag: DESOPADEC

  • DESOPADEC contractors give two-week protest notice

    DESOPADEC contractors give two-week protest notice

    Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC) Indigenous Contractors Forum has vowed to go on mass protest in two weeks if the board fails to speed up payment for executed jobs.

    The group spoke after an emergency meeting in Warri, Delta State.

    It called for the intervention of Governor Sheriff Oborevwori.

    Expressing disappointment about the delayed payment by the new DESOPADEC board, they said it had failed to look into their plight.

    The forum Chairman, Samson Ogie, an engineer; said the new DESOPADEC board had not responded positively to the payment request made by the contractors, despite the subtle approach.

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    He said attempts to reach the Managing Director of DESOPADEC,  Festus Ochornogho and the Executive Director of Finance and Administration, Okome, on how payment could be carried out to avoid conflict between both parties had been unsuccessful.

    The chairman said lack of payment of outstanding money and maltreatment of the indigenous contractors had become worrisome.

    He said they had been patient with the board, adding that they demanded that it should accelerate payment before the end of this month.

    The Secretary of the forum, Prince Charles Ebigbagha, accused the board of reneging on its promise to pay them monthly.

    He said the decision to embark on mass protest should not be taken for granted.

  • Okowa signs DESOPADEC bill, other into law

    Delta State governor,Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, yesterday,  assented to a bill to outlaw illegal and forceful entry into landed properties.

    The practice is known as “deve” in local parlance.

    Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori, accompanied by the Clerk of the Assembly, Mrs Lyna Ocholor, and other principal officers presented the bill known as, “Delta State Public and Private Properties Protection Bill 2018 to the governor for assent at Government House, Asaba.

    Okowa also assented to a bill to amend the Delta State Oil Producing Area Developmental Commission (DESOPADEC) law.

    The governor at the occasion, promised to assent to other bills that have been passed by the Delta State House of Assembly.

    Okowa said that harassment of property developers in the name of “deve” had chased away a lot of developers.

    He expressed confidence that with the signing into law of the bill prohibiting illegal and forceful entry into development sites, the state will witness speedy development.

    He said, “we will collaborate with the Delta State House of Assembly to ensure that laws are passed to impact positively on the lives of our people.  I am glad that this bill to prohibit the forceful entry into public and private properties has been passed into law as it will stop youths from trespassing into property development sites in the state and make investment to thrive. This prohibition will impact on the lives of our people and bring investment sanity into the state.”

    On the DESOPADEC amendment bill, the governor explained that the amendment was meant to ensure that no vacuum was created in the leadership of the commission as government can now extend the tenure of the board under given circumstances.

    He commended the Speaker and members of the House of Assembly for their cordial relationship with the executive arm in bringing development to the people and impacting on the lives of Deltans.

  • Where is DESOPADEC’s N48.6b, APC asks Okowa

    Where is DESOPADEC’s N48.6b, APC asks Okowa

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has urged Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa to explain the whereabouts of N48.6 billion meant for the funding of the State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC) since May, 2015.

    In a statement at the weekend by its Acting Publicity Secretary, Leonard Obibi, the party accused the Okowa-led Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration of either misappropriating or embezzling the fund.

    It said the missing cash had reduced the interventionist agency to a salary-disbursing body.

    APC also said the amendment to the law establishing the agency by the Okowa administration was aimed at making it powerless to alleviate the suffering of oil producing communities.

    But Okowa, who spoke through his Chief Press Secretary, Charles Aniagu, described the allegation as false and uninformed.

    The governor said whatever had accrued to the state from the 13 per cent derivatives had been depleted before it reached government coffers.

    He said the money was deducted to service several financial debts and commitments of the state government.

    APC said it was “alarmed by the devious and possible misappropriation of a mind-boggling sum of N48.6 billion by Governor Okowa. The funds, which legally accrued to and ought to have been released to Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC) for the immediate development of the oil-producing communities, is currently amiss and unaccounted for.

    “The N48.6 billion represents 50 per cent of N97.2 billion, which is the amount already paid by the Federal Government and received from the 13 per cent derivation funds by the Okowa led-PDP government of Delta State from May 2015 to November 2016. Delta APC is concerned that this money may have been misappropriated or embezzled by the Okowa led-PDP government to the chagrin of the beneficiaries who are the oil-producing communities in the state.

    “It is also quite striking that at the onset of Okowa administration, the law setting up DESOPADEC was swiftly amended and it may have been ‘customised’ in a manner that has made it possible for Okowa to render the commission comatose.

    “It is disappointing that Okowa has now reduced activities at the commission to mere payment of wprkers’ salaries. A once vibrant and strategic agency, which held hope and promise for the citizens of the famished oil-producing areas, has been crushed and strangulated, probably preparatory to its demise and eventual interment.

    “Governor Okowa cannot remain silent and evasive any longer. We call on him today to declare to the oil-producing communities the whereabouts of their ‘missing’ N48.6 billion. The funds must be made available for the development of oil-producing areas, as stipulated by law. DESOPADEC has been waiting; the oil-producing communities are insisting on their rights and Deltans are watching.”

    Reacting to the allegation, Aniagu said: “On the issue of the N48.6 billion, which they are claiming, nothing can be farther from the truth. How did they arrive at their calculation? They are claiming that about N90 billion from the 13 per cent derivative, but that is not true. They have forgotten that we have obligations. We have debts that are deducted before the money even gets to the state, on accounts of existing debts, in terms of contractuals, in terms of the bonds as well as the rescheduled loans from the Federal Government.

    “Secondly, DESOPADEC is not a government within government; it was created to aid government in taking care of the plight of our brothers in oil producing communities and our desire is to ensure that DESOPADEC functions optimally. This is why the law was amended, to enable them function, and not to be bugged down by boardroom politics.

    “To the best our knowledge, that amendment has helped DESOPADEC to gain focus, rather than the usual bickering among board members, on account of ethnic sentiments.

    “So, anybody who is insinuating that we are out to make DESOPADEC non-functional or paralyse their activities is not saying the truth. There is nothing close to the truth in what they are alleging. “Besides, everybody is also aware of the state of the economy. You know that Section 14, subsection 2, Paragraph b of the 1999 Constitution makes it clear that the primary purpose of government is the security and welfare of the people. I don’t see any government that will abdicate that responsibility on the altar of road construction.

    “It will, therefore, be very irresponsible for anybody to think that our government is misappropriating money meant for DESOPADEC. That’s not true.”

  • DESOPADEC shut down by naked protesters in Warri

  • DESOPADEC budget not padded, says lawmaker

    The member representing Warri Constituency 1 in the Delta State House of Assembly, Omawumi Udoh, has assured her constituents that there is no fraud in this year’s budget of the State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC).

    Udoh, who spoke yesterday at a town hall meeting with her constituents in Warri, also urged the people to work with her for the unity of the constituency to attract the best of the current administration to the area.

    Responding to comments and criticisms from her constituents, the lawmaker said this year’s DESOPADEC budget was not “padded”.

    But she admitted that the budget lumped projects for the Itsekiri into one local government area.

    Udoh said: “DESOPADEC’s budget was never padded, I must tell you. What happened was that projects for the Itsekiri ethnic nationality, including our constituency, were deliberately – as it were -concentrated in one community. That is a challenge we had to deal with when the proposals came to the House. But the storm is over.”

    The lawmaker advised her constituents and politicians to work together, saying this was the only way they could get the best from the current administration.

    On the allegation of broken promises and alienation of some wards against her, the lawmaker said: “Let’s forget the past. If I have offended anyone, I am sorry. If you have offended me, be sorry. Let’s forge ahead.

  • Delta oil communities allege padding of N28bn DESOPADEC budget

    Oil producing communities in Delta State, under the auspices of Delta Oil and Gas Stakeholders Group, have alleged that the government and House of Assembly are hijacking funds accruing to the Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC).

    The groups warning is against the backdrop of a controversy over the non-passage of DESOPADEC’s N28 billion 2016 budget barely four months to end of year.

    There were allegations that some principal officers of the Assembly demanded N1 billion  ‘allocation’ to facilitate the budget’s passage.

    DOGSG, in a statement by Dr Tagbiretse John, Bro Joseph Ebidenwei, Obakpo Goodluck and Gregory Eze, said they have credible reports that the lawmakers were “padding and balkanising the budget for selfish reasons”.

    They warned that an insurgence more destructive than the havoc by militants could be in the offing, if the government failed to release allocation for the commission to pay contractors and develop their communities.

    “We have watched with growing exasperation the systematic rot that has crept in and overtaken DESOPADEC since the administration took over in 2015. We can no longer sit and do nothing while a colossal conspiracy to cripple the only hope of oil producing communities in the state is unravelling before our eyes.

    “The reason for the comatose state of DESOPADEC is not far-fetched: the non-passage of the 2015 Budget of the commission, with barely four months to the end of the year cannot augur well.

    “If the government is effective and sincere, and the House of Assembly is doing its job, the 2016 budget would be in the implementation stage and the 2017 budget would have been in the final stages of its development.

    “It is a shame that the 2016 DESOPADEC budget is still ‘lost in transit’ and nobody knows what the budget looks like or how much is contained therein. Nobody knows if the N28 billion budget presented to the House in March remains or if it has been changed and how it has been altered.

    “In this era of ‘budget padding’, there are disturbing reports that the Monday Igbuya-led House is performing abracadabra with the budget, while it is also passing like ping-pong from the Government House to the House of Assembly. Nobody is able to account for its whereabouts today.

    “This is a carefully orchestrated plot to deny fund to the commission and the oil producing areas. It is too much of a coincidence that the saga of DESOPADEC ‘Missing Budget’ started after a principal member of the House of Assembly was accused of demanding a N1 billion to facilitate its passage.

    DOGSG warned that “in view of the precarious security challenges in the Niger Delta region, there is need to avoid giving violence-prone elements opportunities to unleash further havoc on oil facilities and our communities because the deliberate decimation of DESOPADEC by the powers that be in the state is an invitation to anarchy.

  • N3.9b DESOPADEC budget: Itsekiri protest N400m ‘golden road’ at Koko

    N3.9b DESOPADEC budget: Itsekiri protest N400m ‘golden road’ at Koko

    A GROUP, the Itsekiri Leaders of Thought (ILoT), has kicked against the allocation of N400 million for a two-kilometre road at Koko in Warri North Local Government Area of Delta State. The group is also unexcited with other provisions in this year’s N3.9 billion “special budget” of the Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC).

    In a letter to Governor Ifeanyi Okowa, ILoT described the allocation as “outrageous”, wondering “whether the road is to be made with gold?”

    The protest letter, by Edward Ekpoko, a lawyer and ILoT’s Secretary as well as Dennis Amorighoye Mene, is the latest controversy bugging down the multibillion DESOPADEC budget, which has elicited protests by Ijaw, Urhobo and other ethnic groups in the commission.

    Although DESOPADEC chairman, Godwin Ebosa, confirmed the allocations, he said he would “not join issues with anybody”.

    But apparently unimpressed by the budget, ILoT said:

    “…Two of the five star projects directed by Governor Okowa to be commissioned within a year are located in one community where the chairman and another board member hail from.”

    It added: “Another is sited where the chairman has a huge multi-million naira oil business interest.

    “All the projects are lumped in marginal areas in just one of the three local government areas.

    “The reasons given for this anomaly is the need to develop the communities, (which have been) neglected over the years and, that it is the prerogative of the chairman to choose where to site the projects.

    “Nonsense! And here we would make their reasons look awkward and ridiculous.

    “The chairman of DESOPADEC was the immediate past ‘elected’ local government chairman of Warri North Local Government Area. All these communities he described as neglected in the past are all in Warri North Local Government Area, and he did nothing to uplift them; now, he is using his own failure as an instrument of blackmail to do an obviously wrong thing.

    “We call on Governor Okowa to be wary of those who want to thwart his well-meaning intention. The directive to have five major projects in each of the five ethnic nationalities of DESOPADEC was at a cost to the governor.

    “He must not allow certain individuals to rubbish his good name and intention. He must be steadfast and take the bull by the horn by putting a halt to the impunity, corruption and high-handedness in DESOPADEC.”

  • Protesters accuse DESOPADEC of misappropriating N16b

    Protesters accuse DESOPADEC of misappropriating N16b

    •Speaker to protesters: don’t jump the gun      

    Host communities of oil and gas companies in Delta State have said N16 billion was not accounted for in last year’s budget of the state’s Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC).

    They protested yesterday at the House of Assembly in Asaba, the state capital, on the inability of the commission to account for the money.

    Itsekiri host communities (HOSTCOM), last Wednesday, protested the N600 million security vote in this year’s budget of the commission.

    The protesters, who were led by the state Chairman of HOSTCOM, Dr Peter Egedegbe, and National Coordinator, Prince Maikpobi Okareme, said projects sited outside the oil and gas producing communities should be de-emphasised.

    They sent a protest letter to the Speaker of the House of Assembly, calling for “full implementation of the 2015 budget,  especially projects that were designed for and which tender documents had been prepared and ready for distribution”.

    The protesters called for increased capital expenditure instead of recurrent.

    They urged the Assembly to stop deliberation on this year’s budget until the anomalies were sorted out.

    According to them, last year’s budget of DESOPADEC had not been fully implemented, adding: “All budget figures for 2015 budget were cleverly omitted to shortchange host communities, especially in the capital budget.”

    Addressing the protesters, Chairman of the House Committee on DESOPADEC, Denis Omovie, said the protest was premature.

    The lawmaker said the Assembly had not examined the budget, which it received last week.

    Omovie said: “A budget is an instrument of law that passes through a process and the 2016 DESOPADEC budget cannot be an exception.”

    The lawmaker said it was not the business of host communities to tell the Assembly how to do its work.

    He said: “As an interventionist agency, every Delta resident has an interest in DESOPADEC, but we must do so within the ambit of the law.”

    Omovie advised the protesters against putting the cart before the horse.

    He hailed them for making the protest peaceful and assured them that the Assembly would consider the interests of stakeholders without neglecting the agency’s mandate.

     

     

  • DESOPADEC: Ijaw, Urhobo communities battle over oil fund

    There were no smiles or exchange of pleasantries last Thursday when Chief Kingsley Ikiere led leaders of the Ijaw Host Communities (HOSTCOM), including Godwin Ozugbo and others,  to address the press. An issue which touched on the essence of the group was at stake – the sharing formula for the 13percent derivation fund accruing to the oil bearing communities through Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission.

    Friends swiftly become foes when the issue of oil production and sharing of proceeds are discussed in the Niger Delta region. The ground for the latest wrangling was the Urhobo HOSTCOM’s threat to shut down oil and gas producing facilities in the state over alleged unfair deals meted on them by their Ijaw and Itsekiri neighbours on the DESOPADEC board.

    The Urhobos were peeved by a number of issues, but mostly the removal of payment of the commission’s staff salaries from the first line charge list.

    Ikiere and Itsekiri HOSTCOM leaders who support the move, beyond cautioning their counterparts against threatening the peace, said it was unholy that Urhobo constitute over 40percent of DESOPADEC’s workforce, even though they produce far less oil.

    Added to that, according to statistics released by the Ijaw, was that the Urhobo had more top cadre staff, who gulp more of the commission’s thinning resources.

    Niger Delta Report learnt that Itsekiri ethnic group produces 29percent of the state’s crude. They are closely followed by their Ijaw counterpart with 27percent while Urhobo, Isoko and Ndokwa produce 22, 14 and 8percent respectively.

    “Is it reasonable to take funds from other Ethnic Nationalities to pay the over-bloated staff of the Urhobos without recourse to the principle of derivation and production quantum?’ the Ijaw HOSTCOM chief asked.

    Checks by Niger Delta Report revealed the latest squabbling merely brings to the fore agitations and disaffection in the running of DESOPADEC over the years. The commission was established by former Governor James Onanefe Ibori at the twilight of his administration in 2007. Its structure is seen by other ethnic groups as unduly slanted in favour of the Urhobo ethnic nationality, from which the former governor hails.

    Over the years, the administrative costs, centralized project costs and staff salaries were paid before the net is split among the various ethnic groups for projects and other developmental initiative.  But recently, this system was abolished in favour of one that places the task of salary payment on the various groups’ finances.

    “This (former) practice was unfair. If we are sharing the money on the basis of oil production, let those who have more staff use their money to pay the staff salaries for justice and equability. That was our sentiment until they decided to stop the first line charge from the budget. So now, every ethnic group pays its staff salary from what is due it and whatever is left is used for project execution,” a staff at the commission’s account department told our reporter.

    Nevertheless, with over 1,600 staff, the new policy has put the Urhobo group at a disadvantage. Our findings revealed that the Managing Director, Chief William Makinde and other Urhobo commissioners are finding it difficult to keep afloat and execute development projects because of the heavy wage bill.

    A five-year old data revealed that the Urhobos have Strength of 1,622 staff against, Itsekiri 884, Ijaw 444, Isoko 363, and Ndokwa 308. They also have more upper cadre staff from10 – 17 (140) against Itsekiri’s 66, Ijaw 22, Isoko 34, Ndokwa 35.

    Before the threat by the Urhobo HOSTCOM, an Urhobo DESOPADEC commissioner had spoken vehemently against the new policy. He vowed to work with his colleagues to change the new order.

    The Urhobo, as the largest ethnic group in the state, feels that they should enjoy the lion share in both projects and staffing. But their counterparts have responded icily to this suggestion, reminding them that the fund is not for population, housing of oil pipelines but actual production which translates to money for the state and DESOPADEC.

    “We want to make it clear that the principle of derivation is not based on ethnicity, population, LG spread and non-oil productive assets or administrative as acclaimed by the Urhobo. The13% oil derivation is based on the number of existing oil well heads and the quantities of oil produced on daily, weekly, monthly and yearly bases.

    “If 13% oil derivation is based on population, geographical land mass or spread, hosting of non-oil productive assets or administrative offices then Kaduna, Lagos and some other States would have been beneficiaries,” the Ijaw HOSTCOM retorted.

    Nevertheless, beyond the displeasure over the employment, the allocation of three commissioners to the ethnic group in spite of their inferior production figure has been a subject of murmur among the other groups.

    Although Governor Ifeanyi Okowa restructured the commission after assuming office, the feeling of angst, especially among the Ijaw and Itsekiri groups, persist. While retaining the allocation of more commissioners for the Urhobos, they also have more members in the new board and higher staff strength.

    And this seething anger surface when Ikiere told newsmen that they want a structure that is both commensurate with staffing and board representation.

    Still, the Urhobo are also challenging the production quantum allocated to it. They accused the two major oil producing groups in the state of duplicating their claims to oil wells. “The Ijaws and Itsekiris are jointly and separately claiming to own some oil wells in other to increase its (sic) production quantum”.

    Although the Ijaw HOSTCOM chair describes the assertion as “laughable and smacks of deep-seated ignorance”, the production sharing issue has been a subject of intense debates, allegations and counter-claims.

  • Multi-billion naira ‘scam’ uncovered in DESOPADEC projects

    Multi-billion naira ‘scam’ uncovered in DESOPADEC projects

    Multi-billion naira scam in the execution of projects of the Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (DESOPADEC) has allegedly been uncovered.

    This followed the verification of the projects executed by the former boards of the commission.

    It was learnt that many projects allegedly completed on paper were nowhere to be seen in Ogbe-Ijoh kingdom, where the commissioner representing the Ijaw ethnic nation in DESOPADEC, Chief Favour Izoukumor, started the audit of projects under his jurisdiction.

    Addressing reporters in Warri, Delta State, the DESOPADEC commissioner expressed concerns about the development.

    He said: “It is unfortunate that in Ogbe-Ijoh main town, most of the major projects were nowhere to be found. The community chairman attested that the projects were on paper but not on ground.

    “Other such projects are those sited on Naifor Island, where we discovered that there are projects on paper but their levels of completion at the site are far below what is claimed.”

    The commissioner the verification became necessary because of “our concern over high debt profile of the commission”.

    Izoukumor said: “The verification will be extended to other kingdoms. After what we have seen, we will go back and recommend to the board.

    “I am highly impressed with the performance of contractors who worked in communities in the coastal areas of Ajuju, Diebiri/Batan, New Salvation, Bomobolou and Ekeremor Zion, among others. We can see that most of them performed creditably well. That is encouraging.”

    There were also concerns about how contractors, who did not execute their jobs, were paid, sometimes in full; while those who performed well were being owed.

    Investigation by our reporter revealed that projects worth about N30 billion were sited in Ijaw communities, comprising six local government areas.

    It was learnt that there were multi-million naira contracts for the “extension of secretariat road and drainages, which were almost paid in full; but nothing is on ground”.

    Others include the Civic Centre, for which the commission paid millions of naira and which was reportedly completed on paper.

    The verification team, led by Izoukumor, did not find the projects.

    The commission could neither find a football pitch and adjoining spectators’ stand, which were “nearly 100 per cent completed” on paper.

    It was further gathered that although completion certificates were raised for up to 80 per cent work at the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) Corpers’ Lodge, the team reportedly found only 15 per cent job. The project was still at the DPC level.

    Our checks revealed that although about 100 per cent payment had been made for a Pere’s Palace Guest House Annexe, there was nothing on ground; the perimeter fencing, which was also awarded, had not taken off.

    At Naifor Island (Naifogbene), it was gathered that although contractors handling the construction of a civic centre had been paid in full, the project was still at lintel level.

    The construction of six blocks of classrooms at the community’s secondary school was barely 50 per cent completed even though the contractor had been paid a huge chunk of the contract sum.

    The latest development came on the heels of a similar verification by the Itsekiri Leaders of Thought (ILOT), which led to the call on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to probe several projects.