Tag: NDDC

  • Ondo Coastal communities urge NDDC to complete reclamation

    Ogbo communities in Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State have urged the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to ensure speedy completion of the reclamation of the area.

    They urged the commission to order the contractor to implement their proposal for sand-filling the area.

    The affected communities are: Zion Ikorigho, Ikorigho, Awoye and Molutehin, all in the coastal area of the state.

    A statement by Chief R. O. Nana, Afolabi Aboyewa, Jackson Nomiye and Ola Omotehinse, on behalf of the communities, regretted that the billions naira project had been abandoned.

    They recalled that after paying the mobilisation fee to the contractor, a team, which conducted soil tests at different locations, visited the communities several times to determine the quantum of sand available.

    The team reportedly informed the communities that the quantity of the sand in the tested sites was grossly inadequate to complete the projects.

    It said: “…To avoid the increasing likelihood or abandoning these monumental projects, for which mobilisation fees have been paid, our communities separately wrote, between 2012 and 2014, to the management of the NDDC and suggested that the projects be executed with 70 per cent alluvial, which is the predominant soil in the area.

    “In anticipation of the NDDC’s approval of our suggestion, the contractor moved to the project sites and carried out the necessary bundle-work therein, but has now moved out, after completing the bundle-work.”

    According to them, the contractor had assured that only the approval of the management of the commission would make them use the proposal for the project.

  • Group hails NDDC chairman

    A group, the Akwa Ibom Unity Forum, Lagos, has praised the Managing Director of Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Mr Nsima Ekere, for what it called his sterling leadership qualities in developing the region without discrimination.

    In a statement issued after its August Congress in Lagos, the group said Ekere, a chieftain of the All Progressive Congress (APC), has made Niger Deltans happy through his humility, commitment, hard work, love and selfless service to humanity.

    The statement, signed by the group’s General Secretary, Peter Umoh, a lawyer, added: “We are happy that our brother and son has made us proud in his national assignment as the Managing Director of NDDC having touched critical areas of need in the region.

    “It is an indication that when other state or national assignments are given to him, he would do even better. We are well pleased and are solidly behind him, party and his future endeavor, politically and socially.”

    The group pledged its support for Ekere, urging him not to relent in his effort to transform the region.

  • NDDC scholars overseas cry for help

    Sir: I humbly plead for your assistance in helping to draw the attention of NDDC Management lead by Mr Nsima Ekere to pay our school fees and upkeep.

    It’s been over one year since we set out for studies on foreign soils sponsored by the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC). According to the award letter, the scholarship amounts to $30,000 dollars per year. This amount is to cover tuition and upkeep.

    But up till now, many of us have not been paid (either tuition or upkeep). Some people (PhD students) who started in 2015 are owed close to two years fees and upkeep. We are really suffering; most schools have shut us out of their facilities. Landlords have chased us out of accommodation; even feeding is very difficult.

    Most of us are from very poor families; we had to borrow money to travel hoping to pay back whenever NDDC pays.

    We have tried every means to contact the NDDC office, yet no response. The most worrisome thing is that no one is saying anything about the payment and it seems it may never come.

    We have done everything to draw the attention of NDDC Managing Director. This includes emails, using social media, text messages and phone calls. But each time, Mr Ekere comes out to address the press saying he has ordered payment or with one excuse or other.

    During the last press briefing by the NDDC MD, he used the excuse of some of us changing schools. This is a very flimsy excuse because none of us changed schools without due approval letter from NDDC management. The change of school itself is often necessitated by the fact that the NDDC scholarship funds of $30,000.00 (which is often paid as £19,200.00) is often inadequate to pay schools fees in high ranking UK universities (with school fees above £25,000.00). Thus we had to change schools to universities with lower fees (based on advice from NDDC). Currently, there is no UK university with fees less than £10,000.00 for Nigerian students. So the £19,200.00 often paid by NDDC is hardly adequate for fees and upkeep.

    It is important to note that all change in schools is always duly approved by NDDC management with a duly signed letter to that effect. So this cannot be used as an excuse.

    We are suffering. The hardship experienced out here (in a country where the colour of your skin and the very fact that you are a Nigerian is a disadvantage) cannot be properly explained.

    I humbly plead for help in drawing the attention of the NDDC management and even the federal government to come to our help.

     

    • Ime Ben,

    Glasgow, United Kingdom.

  • Fed Govt owes NDDC N1.8tr, says official

    The Head, Media and Public Affairs, Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Mr Ibitoye Abosede,  yesterday said the Federal Government owed NDDC N1.8 trillion.

    Abosede spoke in Uyo at a one-day Media Capacity Building Workshop for members of the Correspondents’ Chapel of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Akwa Ibom.

    He lamented that non-remittance of backlog of statutory allocations had hampered development in the region.

    Abosede said the Federal Government had mandated  ministries of Niger Delta Affairs, Budget and National Planning to sit with NDDC Board  on the debt owed the commission.

    “The Federal Government has set up a committee to ascertain the exact money owed the commission,” he said.

    According to him, this is the first time a sitting President will demonstrate this kind of political will towards ensuring the development of the region.

    Abosede, represented by Mr Chijoke Amu-Nnadi, of the department, explained that besides the arrears from statutory allocations, other associated funds for ecology, oil and gas, among others, had not been remitted.

    “These problems of funding and the challenges of the terrain in Niger Delta, which prides itself as the third largest wetland in the world, have hindered development in the region,” he said.

    He said several projects worth N200 billion were cancelled across all nine states of the region due to the challenge.

    The official noted that the Federal Government under President Muhammadu Buhari is committed to fund the commission.

    Abosede said the NDDC Board, led by Mr Nsima Ekere, was doing its best to sustain the tempo of development.

    He recalled that following mass discontent leading to arm struggle in the region, NDDC was unveiled to bring development, economic and socio-political stability to the region.

    Abosede said the NDDC had intervened in  64 road projects, with about 50 per cent completed in Akwa Ibom.

    “Because of funding challenge, it is difficult for the commission to complete some major projects,” he said.

    He enjoined development partners to work with the agency to sustain development in the region.

    The official explained that the commission was heavily complementing the states’ development plans.

    Also speaking, Mr Samuel Frank, NDDC commissioner in Akwa Ibom, said the commission was not at war with Akwa Ibom government.

    He said the commission was focusing on providing infrastructure to alleviate the suffering of the people.

    Frank said NDDC did well in the state by rehabilitating roads in rural and urban centres of the state.

    He solicited more cooperation with the media to foster development in the region.

  • SMEDAN, NDDC partner on Southsouth growth

    The Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) will continue to work with the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to achieve its mandate of developing Southsouth, Director-General Dr. Dikko Umaru Radda, has said.

    He spoke during a meeting with the NDDC Managing Director, Mr. Nsime Nkere, at the agency’s headquarters in Abuja.

    Radda acknowledged the importance of the agency in helping to actualise the mandate of the commission, adding that the agency was set up to facilitate the development and promotion of MSMEs, and that the visit of Nkere to the agency was commendable.

    He added that the agency was well- positioned to create jobs and alleviate poverty and ready to work with the NDDC in implementing its work plan for the development of the region.

    Radda said the agency has 23 Industrial Development Centres (IDCs) nationwide, which provide technical manpower for industries , adding that four of these centres are located in the Niger Delta Region.

    He lamented that facilities in the IDCs are dilapidated with most of the equipment obsolete coupled with the problem of land encroachment.

    The Director-General however stated that the Agency received a grant from the African Development Bank (ADB) to study how the IDCs can be turned around to become enterprise clusters.

    According to him, SMEDAN is planning to convert the IDCs into enterprise clusters where enterprises involved in similar products and activities will be located in the same place with all necessary machines, equipment and trainings provided for them.

    He emphasised that being in the same location makes it easier for regulatory agencies to monitor their performances for financial institutionsto enable provide loans and help to facilitate linkage to markets for their products and services.

    Radda assured the NDDC chief that SMEDAN would collaborate with his commission to see how both institutions could develop the IDCs in the Niger Delta Region.

  • Shell pays  $31b to Fed Govt, NDDC

    Shell pays $31b to Fed Govt, NDDC

    Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) has remitted $29.8 billion to the Federation Account and another $1.2 billion to the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), between 2002 and 2016, its General Manager, External Relations, Igo Weli, has said.

    Weli who was reacting to the shutdown of the oil major’s flow station and gas plant in Belema community by angry youths yesterday in Port Harcourt, said the seizure of SPDC’s facilities by the youth will not only send the wrong signal to the international community, but is capable of discouraging further investment in the Niger Delta.

    The youths accused the company of neglecting their community in the provision of infrastructure.

    Weli said contrary to people’s expectations, the company doesn’t have the resources to solve world hunger, although it has added value to Nigeria’s growth in several ways. “People are having high expectations from SPDC, they forget the company is not the government and do not have the resources to solve world hunger.”

    He said SPDC has made several efforts to sensitise the people on how our business is run so that their expectations can be realistic and align with realities of how we run our business.

    “The business we do, add value in several ways through contributions to the Federation Account and the NDDC.

    “Between 2012 and 2016, SPDC JV (joint venture) contributed $29.8 billion to the Federation Account which flows down to the state governments, local governments and to the communities,” he stated.

    Weli  said the company has also set aside three percent of its annual budget to NDDC as its contribution to the development of the region.

    He described the closure of the company’s facility as “worrisome” especially as the company and its partners “have spent millions of naira on human and infrastructure programmes in the communities.

    “If the youths isolate our corporate social responsibility and put all the burden of infrastructure needs on SPDC, then the expectation would not balance,” saying  “in 2016 alone, our contribution to NDDC was $106.8 million. People need to define their expectation; ask themselves if their expectation is realistic and if SPDC is the government.

    “People should express their grievances in a way that follows due process to avoid sending the wrong signal to potential investors about how businesses are treated in our society,” Weli said, adding that though the company had set aside N7 billion for the development of the Niger Delta, the funds are yet to be spent due to restiveness. and litigations affecting the implementation of its social investment drive in the communities.

  • Cross River raises alarm  of fraud in NDDC over  duplication of projects

    Cross River raises alarm of fraud in NDDC over duplication of projects

    The Cross River State Government has raised fears of fraud over some projects of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), which are actually being implemented by the state government.

    Special Adviser to the Governor on NDDC, Mr Victor Ekpo, disclosed to The Nation in Calabar yesterday that the state government is actually carrying out some projects, which the Commission has called for invitation to tender for.

    Ekpo stressed the need for the Commission to synergize with the state government in order to check incidence of fraud that may arise from such situations, as well as bring more spread of development to the people.

    He said, “There is need for them to work with the state government because that gives way to serious fraud. As I speak to you there are some roads in Obudu that are ongoing for the Cross River State government, while that same job is in the NDDC budget already awarded to contractors. So what they do is that the contractor would go and arrange one small signboard and take pictures and go back and claim the money for a road constructed by the state government. So you can see that NDDC has already called for invitation to tender for these projects while the Cross River State government is constructing the road. Some examples are the construction of the Utikeb-Ohong-Bebeatsuan Road; the construction of the 2km Utugwan Ring Road; and the 1km Okorotung/Amukwong Road, all in Obudu local government area.

    “So I am calling on NDDC for proper joint meeting before the carry on an any project. There should be a joint appropriation meeting between the NDDC and the Cross River State government. The government might have a planned to put a water project somewhere and that same project may be embarked on by the NDDC. So we would be having cases of project duplication.

    “Working together would minimize cases of fraud, proper management of projects and bring more spread of projects to the citizenry. NDDC cannot for instance run a hospital or a school. So if they build a school for the state, it is the Ministry of Education that would post teachers there to go there. The NDDC is put in place to alleviate poverty to the people of the Niger Delta, so if you come in and people are not benefiting, then the purpose is defeated.

    “There is need for these meetings, so these contractors would not come in and claim credit for projects carried out by the Cross River State government and go to Port Harcourt and claim money.

    “There is need for us to synergize so we can bring real development to the people, because the government is working here. The government should make inputs before they NDDC makes any budget.”

    He also raised alarm over the level of abandoned NDDC projects in the state.

    “The level of abandoned project in the state is much. Some NDDC contractors would just come into the state and somehow they would have a certificate of completion of project, while such jobs have not even been done,” he said.

     

  • Embrace the Niger Delta master plan – NDDC urges monarchs

    Embrace the Niger Delta master plan – NDDC urges monarchs

    The Niger Delta Development Commission, (NDDC) has urged traditional rulers in the South-South region of the country to embrace the master plan of the Niger Delta region.

    The NDDC Chairman, Sen. Victor Ndoma-Egba, stated this when he received the delegation of the South-South Monarchs Forum led by King Edmund Daukoru, the Amayanabo of Nembe in Port Harcourt on Wednesday.

    A statement by Mr Ibitoye Abosede, Director Corporate Affairs of The Commission, disclosed that the chairman decried the abandonment of the master plan shortly after it was launched in 2007.

    “We must return to the Master Plan. We have to agree on whether to terminate the current Master Plan, update it or upgrade it. And we need the traditional institution to play a role in this process,” he said.

    Ndoma-Egba stated that a comprehensive plan was necessary for any meaningful development and progresses to take place.

    He said that the NDDC was collaborating with state governments as partners rather than alternatives or competitors for the overall development of the region.

    According to the chairman, the region need to be united in all its activities to achieve the desired peace and development in the Niger Delta.

    He added: “There is no doubt that the South-South region has to speak with one voice and that is why engagements of this nature are very important because it will help us find a common ground.

    “It will help us synchronize our thoughts and our ideas so that whenever and wherever we speak as leaders of the South-South, whether as traditional rulers or political leaders, we speak with one voice.

    “I believe that the reality on ground is that the traditional institution plays a role in ensuring peace, mobilizing for development, providing a forum for dialogue, or providing a framework for furthering an action with others in this country.”

    On his part, Daukoru said that the landscape of the Niger Delta was dotted with “fruits from the Commission.”

    “We are ready to partner with NDDC and give you all the encouragement you need and we are hoping that we will see a bit more of you in terms of outreach through us to the grassroots people.

    “We also want to act as a channel and an advocacy institution for you so that through us, you will be able to communicate to the people whatever opportunities are open that they can participate more effectively.”

    Daukoru, who was a former Minister of Petroleum, decried the past neglect of the Niger Delta, stressing that the monarchs are the “missing ingredient” needed to galvanize positive development in the region.

  • Ex-militant leaders hail NDDC’s project director Adjogbe

    Ex-militant leaders hail NDDC’s project director Adjogbe

    Some ex-agitators in the Niger Delta, under the aegis of National Assembly of Niger Delta Ex-militants, (NANDE), have hailed the commitment and professionalism of the Nsima Ekere-led management of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    NANDE’s National Coordinator Edwin Ekpekumemu  spoke for the ex-agitators after a meeting of its leaders and youths in Benin City, Edo State capital.

    Expressing confidence in the management, NANDE lauded the All Progressives Congress-(APC)-led Federal Government for assembling thoroughbred professionals, who place high premium on integrity and best global practice.

    Specifically, it noted that the Executive Director, Project (EDP), Sam Adjogbe, has championed the mantra of due diligence in NDDC, with his zero tolerance for sharp practice.

    NANDE said the tradition of extortion and underhand dealings by youths and other individuals have given way to equity and good conscience as a driving force pioneered by the Urhobo-born engineer.

    Ekpekumemu noted that besides, contracts now go through painstaking professional examination on the basis of merit under the most transparent process.

    Giving kudos once again to President Muhammadu Buhari for giving Niger Deltans hope through this appointment and others, NANDE urged the Federal Government to empower the management to deliver on its mandate.

    Since coming on board, the Ekere-led team has instilled decency in the process of contract award and execution, with Adjogbe as arrowhead.

    But this due process has drawn flak from those who still crave the old order in NDDC.

    NANDE warns disgruntled ex-militants and others, especially Eshanekpe Israel, against distracting the management for their selfish interest and demands.

    “We know the self-acclaimed ex-agitators, whose hallmark is extortion and blackmailing our leaders in the region to do their bidding. This, the EDP is resisting as a man of good conscience, and we implore him to de-emphasise questionable characters, who have no place in this new dispensation of value rebirth in the commission.’’

  • NDDC revokes 600 contracts

    The Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) has revoked more than 600 contracts and projects.

    NDDC Managing Director Nsima Ekere told reporters in Port Harcourt yesterday that the commission’s management and board took the decision to adopt a ‘4R’  initiative as  roadmap  to  development.

    According to him, the commission’s 4R initiative is restructuring the balance sheet,  reforming  governance protocols,  restoring  core mandate and reaffirming  commitment to doing what is right and proper.

    Ekere, who  said that the commission’s balance sheet was over bloated with contingent liabilities in excess of N1.3 trillion, added that this   justified the reform.

    “The move became imperative looking at the resources coming on monthly or yearly basis which necessitated restructuring it in a manner that will be meaningful to achieve results.

    “The last management meeting approved cancellation of over 600 projects that NDDC already embarked on.

    “We discovered that some of the contracts were either not properly awarded or some of them were awarded but the contractors have not yet gone to site.

    “Some of the contracts were awarded as late as 2002 with some of the contractors collecting advance payments from the commission with zero work done at the sites.

    “So, we terminated these contracts worth about N200 billion, which is the first phase of our restructuring the commission’s balance sheet,” he said.

    Ekere said that the second phase of restructuring the commission’s balance sheet would affect projects that have only attained zero to five  per cent completion status.

    He explained that contractors in this category were those who mobilised to site but had achieved negligible work compared to contractual agreement.

    According to him, equally affected are contractors that have not been to the site for upwards of five to seven years, and as such, performed poorly.

    “On restoration of the commission’s core mandate,  we want to ensure that projects that we do is geared toward achieving the core mandates for establishing the commission.

    “In the past, our contracts and projects were politically motivated while some were done to satisfy one person or interest which is not good enough.

    “If there is a Master Plan or design to achieve a certain milestone within a set period; every year or month spent should be an incremental step toward achieving that target.

    “So, we looked at the master plan which is supposed to be accomplished within 50 years but have already spent 10 years without much being achieved,” he said.

    Ekere explained that the Niger Delta Regional Development Master Plan was a plan that articulated policies and programmes that ought to be collectively executed by different development partners.

    He listed the development partners to include federal, state and local governments; Ministry of Niger Delta, International Oil Companies, the World Bank, European Union and USAID  among others.

    “So, the days of struggling and competing with local government councils on who would buy chalk for blackboards in schools must be over.

    “We want to do less of the smaller projects and do more of the bigger projects that will ultimately impact on the socio-economic lives and development of the region,” he said.

    Ekere said the third agenda was reformation of the commission’s governance system aimed to running the commission in an efficient and transparent manner with reliance on technology.

    The managing director said the last phase was to reposition the mindset and thinking of members of staff with focus on enthroning  professionalism and expertise in service delivery.