Tag: the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC)

  • Cross River rejects narratives on NDDC projects commissioning in Calabar

    Cross River rejects narratives on NDDC projects commissioning in Calabar

    The Cross River State Government has firmly rejected reports it described as surrounding the recent commissioning of select projects by the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) in Calabar, describing the narratives as inaccurate and politically motivated.

    On Friday, June 13, 2025, the Minister of Regional Development, Hon. Abubakar Momoh, officially commissioned several NDDC projects in Cross River State. 

    These included a newly acquired office complex now serving as the NDDC Secretariat in the state, agricultural equipment, and a road project on Idang Street. 

    A statement by the Chief Press Secretary to Cross Rivers Governor Bassey Otu, Nsa Gil, pointed out the event was conducted peacefully and broadcast live on TVC, contrary to certain media reports suggesting controversy or disruption.

    It said: “The Governor of Cross River State, Senator Prince Bassey Edet Otu, was ably represented at the event by the Commissioner for Works and Infrastructure, Hon. Ankpo P. Edet. 

    “At no point was the event disrupted, either by the Governor or any other state official. Governor Otu, a loyal member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), remains committed to supporting federal initiatives aimed at improving infrastructure and livelihoods across the state.

    “Cross River, it is worth noting, was the first APC-governed state in the South-South region and continues to benefit significantly from federal government projects. 

    “These include the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway, Special Agro-Processing Zones, and the Federal Housing Scheme, among others. The state government reiterated that no level of “sponsored blackmail” by fifth columnists would succeed in straining the existing cordial relationship between Cross River and the Federal Government, which share a common progressive ideology.

    “Among the projects listed for commissioning was the Nyaghasang Community Road, which was eventually postponed. The state clarified that this particular road project was not initiated by the NDDC but by the Cross River State Government.”

    Speaking on the matter, Hon. Pius Ankpo stated: “The Nyaghasang road was initiated and funded by the Cross River State Government. We have completed the drainage, concrete works, and channelization of the area, with construction still ongoing.”

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    He explained that the NDDC was never formally involved in the planning or execution of the project, and emphasized the importance of coordination when implementing infrastructure projects within the state. According to Edet, the NDDC has been advised that, going forward, it must engage the State Government, review the Bill of Engineering Measurement and Evaluation (BEME), and adhere to state construction standards before undertaking any project.

    The Cross River State Government reiterated its openness to development partnerships but emphasized that all interventions must be transparent and coordinated for the greater good of the people.

    “We are not in conflict with the NDDC or any federal agency,” Edet clarified. “However, for the sake of public trust and historical accuracy, it is important to state unequivocally that the NDDC projects were commissioned peacefully, and without any form of disruption.”

    Supporting the government’s position, the Secretary-General of the Nyaghasang Qua Clan Council, Mr. Iso Bassey Edim, recalled that Governor Otu had personally pledged to address the road infrastructure in the community during a health center commissioning in July 2024. “True to his word, work began on the roads just three weeks later, led by the State Ministry of Works and Infrastructure,” he said.

    Edim noted that while work was ongoing, the NDDC appeared to have intervened by asphalting certain sections of the road, only to later return and announce a commissioning. “We advise the NDDC, as an interventionist agency, to align and synergize with the state government to avoid duplication and confusion,” he cautioned.

    The Mayor of Calabar Municipality, Apostle James Anam, confirmed that the project contract had already been awarded by the state and was actively in progress before the NDDC’s involvement. “What we need now is constructive collaboration between the NDDC and the state government. Projects should not be initiated or claimed without proper consultation,” he stressed.

  • A rash of development commissions

    A rash of development commissions

    Sir: Each of Nigeria’s six geopolitical zones wanted a development commission, pushed for one, and got the same to leave Nigeria with more commissions with no real commission or cognizance among Nigeria’s poorest and most vulnerable people.

    In 2000, the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) was formed. Whoever told the government that curing the injustice in the Niger Delta region would take a commission clearly exaggerated their counsel because the government of President Olusegun Obasanjo approved the commission, and it was created to serve a region ripped apart by oil exploration.

    Despite some feats here and there, the commission has largely been hit-and-miss. What it has however not failed to do is participate in Nigeria’s corruption bazaar. In fact, Nigerians have been treated to some frightening levels of graft at the commission such that it would amount to wildly sweetening the pudding to say that the commission has been a staggering success.

    The clear struggles of the flagship regional development commission did not, however, prevent other regions for angling for same. It could not have. After all, many such projects in Nigeria are all about getting logged in to the national treasury and nothing more.

    For years, the North, particularly the Northeast and Northwest, have been a cauldron of terrorist attacks and heart-breaking suffering for families, especially women and children. For more than a decade now, the devastation has been utter and complete. Schools, homes, and public buildings have been repeatedly razed across the region, plunging a region that did not have much to begin with, into new levels of despair and destitution. It therefore came as a little surprise that the good people of the region wanted a development commission too.

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    Since then, the Southeast, North-central and Southwest have got their development commissions to complete the merry-go-round of development commissions. The last to be approved a few weeks ago was the North-central development commission. 

    With each of Nigeria’s six geopolitical regions now a proud owner of a development commission, is it simply a case of what is sauce for the goose being sauce for the gander, or do the development commissions have any roles to play in the regions?

    More to the point: will the commissions serve the interests of the neediest in the respective regions, or will they be yet more conduits for frittering away public funds? The NDDC experiment lends a disturbing indication that at the end of the day, the development commissions would exist only to service a narrow strip of select interests across Nigeria.

    Unfortunately for Nigerians and most disappointingly for Nigeria’s founding fathers, Nigeria’s set up as a federation has never really worked. Stripped of autonomy and confidence by the federal government’s extreme greed for power, the federating units which barely contribute anything at the end of the day prefer to bite and bicker at each other like a bunch of spoilt children. They often insist that whatever goes to one region must go to others and when this does not happen at all or quickly enough, it becomes a point of divisive disagreement.

    The South-south region now wants a development commission to rival what other regions have. It conveniently ignores the fact that the Niger Delta Development Commission covers almost all the states in the region.

    This proliferation of development commissions doesn’t just appear patronizing but also perfidious.

    •Ike Willie-Nwobu,Ikewilly9@gmail.com