Tag: Timi Alaibe

  • PDP youths warn aspirants against causing crisis

    The People’s Democratic Party Youth Network (PDPYN) in Bayelsa State has cautioned governorship aspirants, including a former Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Chief Timi Alaibe, against causing crisis in the party ahead of the November governorship election.

    The Secretary-General, James Oputin, said the youths were worried that activities of some aspirants was affecting the existing unity and strength of the party.

    Oputin said PDPYN observed sponsored articles in newspapers desperately trying to create a wrong impression of a non-existing strife within the PDP.

    According to him, the aspirants behind the sponsored articles claimed to be “preferred candidates” of political leaders in the state to resolve the phantom crisis.

    Read Also: Man loses teeth as APC, PDP youths clash in Makurdi

    He was shocked that some so-called ‘leading aspirants’ surreptitiously sponsored articles designed to malign the leadership of the PDP by portraying them as weak and losing grip of its dominance of Bayelsa politics.

    The president, therefore, urged the aspirants  to note that the PDP, which some of them abandoned when they were needed most in 2015, and which graciously admitted them back, was strong enough to win with or without them.

     

  • PDP to voters: shun unfit candidates at polls

    The Bayelsa State chapter of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) at the weekend appealed to voters to stay away from misfits parading themselves as candidates of opposition parties.

    The party said the next elections should be about its qualified, tested and trusted candidates against dropouts in opposition parties.

    PDP spoke in Kolokuma-Opokuma Local Government Area where it formally launched its campaigns for the Central Senatorial District.

    The event was attended by PDP leaders in the area such as a former Managing Director, NDDC, Chief Timi Alaibe; Secretary to State Government (SSG), Chief Gideon Ekeowe and the Central Senatorial District Director of Campaign, Talford Ongolo.

    The PDP state Chairman, Mr. Cleopas Moses, called on the people to evaluate the qualifications of the candidates to make informed decisions at the poll.

    Read Also: ‘Enough of PDP, APC ‘misrule’

    He said: “We have tested and trusted candidates unlike other parties that have presented misfits and dropouts as candidates. We are ready with the support of the people.

    “Go and check those selected from the pockets of the few. They have been nominated to fail. Leg us tell the people that it is proper to send experienced persons to the state and National Assemblies.”

    In his remarks, Ongolo, who unveiled the party’s Central Senatorial Candidate, Douye Diri to the crowd challenged the opposition parties to bring out their candidates.

    “The Bayelsa people want capable and articulate candidates. These are the people we have in the PDP. We challenge the opposition to bring forward their candidates and let the people judge”, he said.

    Also speaking, Alaibe asked the people to vote the PDP in the forthcoming election to enjoy infrastructural developmemt in the area.

    “All the roads constructed and the electricity projects into Kolokuma and Opokuma was done by the PDP. We are able to access road because of the PDP. Even when we had challenges, the same PDP delivered us. The PDP represent equity and Justice”, he said.

  • Clarke sues for peace as FG, PANDEF unite for Niger Delta development

    Clarke sues for peace as FG, PANDEF unite for Niger Delta development

    The Federal Government and the Niger Delta Leaders under the aegis of Pan Niger Delta Elders Forum (PANDEF) met for several hours at the Presidential Villa on Thursday and agreed to partner to actualize the FG’s new vision for the region’s development.

    The meeting, presided over by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, was attended by the Ministers of Environment, Niger Delta Development Affairs, State for Petroleum, and the Chairman of NDDC, Sen. Ndoma Egba.

    Also in attendance were Chief Edwin Clarke, Alabo Graham Douglas, Chief Timi Alaibe, Chief Alfred Diette-Spiff, former Akwa Ibom Gov. Victor Attah and a host of other Niger Delta leaders.

    Elder statesman and leader of PANDEF, Clarke, who addressed state House Correspondents at the end of the meeting described it as very fruitful and called on the people of the region to maintain peace and await the implementation of the FG’s vision.

    “The message is that everyone should maintain peace,’’ Clarke said adding that the group had seen the commitment of the federal government to pursue its development agenda in the region.

    ““The meeting was excellent.  We met with Mr Acting President and he was very honest, truthful, forthright and we were very satisfied.”

    Clark denied an ultimatum was issued to the federal government on the vision’s implementation but added that the parties agreed on many things with PANDEF and the ministers presenting their separate addresses and Osinbajo rounding off.

    “We saw his genuineness, truthfulness, forthrightness; he is a gentleman and we support him and we are satisfied,” he said.

    The PANDEF leader stated that the region would withdraw from its former position and embrace the path laid by the federal government for the development of the region.

    According to him, the region and FG have agreed to work together noting that the issue of dialogue will also take place.

    He assured the Niger Delta people that the 16-point agenda they presented to the FG was fully discussed as well as the government’s 20-point agenda.

    On why the Niger Delta leaders were not speaking with one voice, the elder statesman said there were no other leaders in the region with dissenting voices.

    He said that MEND was represented at the meeting noting that the group’s acclaimed spokesman did not exist.

    “Jomo Gbomo does not exist as a human being. That is a ghost name and a fake name. MEND was here, all other organizations were here.

    “I am the leader of the Niger Delta and every leader you can think of from Cross River to Edo state was here,’’ he stated.

    Buttressing the points, he minister of State for Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, acknowledged that there was no ultimatum from any part of the region to the federal government.

    He said that the meeting was to find solutions to the Niger Delta issues adding that it was basically to explore how government had gone ahead with the fulfillment of the parties’ undertakings on the 16-point agenda raised during the tour of the region.

    He said several issues including the University at Okerenkoko, issues related to the development of the Niger Delta generally, amnesty programme and how well it was working, and NDDC operations were discussed.

    “Today was an environment of calm, peace and friendliness and mutual dialogue of the issues for them to understand where we are coming from and understand the most pressing problems that we have,’’ he said.

    He acknowledged that PANDEF pledged commitment to work with the federal government to find solutions to the problems confronting the region.

    He said that the alarm that was generated was that government should hurry up with the projects as the people were getting worried and tired and wanted to see positive actions on all the items.

    He said that PANDEF was convinced with  the explanations of the Acting President and had realized that the government was not playing about the vision to correct the wrongs in the region for over 30 years.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that as the meeting was on the Acting Presidential Spokesman, Laolu Akande, released a fact sheet on the vision showing that the FG had set aside an initial one billion dollars for the clean-up and environmental remediation of Ogoniland.

    According to the fact sheet, 200 million dollars will be disbursed yearly for the first five years and work on the project will be conducted in line with international best practices.

    Akande stated that already soil and water tests had been done in preparation for the clean-up and 15 technical assistants from Ogoniland hired to be part of the work.

    He said that to drive infrastructure, the FG has released funds for the continuation of various sections of the East-West Road adding that as at March 2017, the overall project completion was substantial with some sections reaching 99 per cent completion.

    Akande stated that the FG had plans to construct health centres in the states and communities of the region which on completion would be fully equipped to address some of the health needs of rural dwellers.

    He added that FG had started the process of replacing illegal refineries in the region with modular ones, including options on how to involve the communities as shareholders in the proposed Modular Refineries.

    He said that the ground-breaking of the first set of such refineries were expected in the 4th quarter of 2017 and the government  would supply crude to the local refineries at reasonable price.

    Akande stated that the measure was to serve as an incentive to stop the current practice whereby illegal refiners vandalised and stole the crude adding that each Niger Delta state was expected to host two modular refineries.

  • Osinbajo, PANDEF meet in Aso Rock 

    Osinbajo, PANDEF meet in Aso Rock 

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday night met behind closed doors with members of the Pan Niger Delta Elders Forum (PANDEF).

    The meeting started around 7p.m at the Vice President’s conference room.

    Some of those attending the meeting included Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Pastor Usani Uguru Usani, elder statesman, Edwin Clarke and Alfred Diete-Spiff.

    Other are God knows Igali, Timi Alaibe, Obong Victor Atta, Graham Douglas, Dan Etete, Captain Idahosa Okunbo, Paul Ogbebor, and Senator Ndoma Egba.

    The meeting was still in progress at the time of filing this report.

    Details Later…

     

  • Applying Alaibe’s recommendations for devt of Niger Delta

    Applying Alaibe’s recommendations for devt of Niger Delta

    The assurance, by the federal government, that all the oil bearing communities in the Niger Delta will enjoy equal treatment in the distribution of developmental projects is a soothing balm to the wounds of communities that have over the years suffered neglect by successive administrations in the various attempts at addressing the vexed issue of even development of the region.

    Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, reportedly gave the assurance not long ago when representatives of Gbaramatu Kingdom in Delta State paid him a courtesy visit.

    For far too long, communities in states that are derisively considered as ‘fringe members’ of the Niger Delta have suffered what can at best be described as official neglect in the distribution and siting of developmental projects, for the simple reason that they are not the ‘mainstream’ oil bearing states, and therefore do not suffer the same level of destruction of the environment and other negative consequences of oil exploration and production, like the latter.

    It is the reason Niger Delta has inadvertently come to be synonymous with states like Rivers, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, Delta, Cross River and Edo. It is hardly remembered that Ondo, Imo and Abia states are also in the Niger Delta. In fact, reference is sometimes made to Delta, Rivers and Bayelsa as the so-called core Niger Delta. It doesn’t help matters, either, that people in these three states see themselves, rather arrogantly, as the ‘real Niger Delta’ people, through utterances and actions.

    But thank God for the Buhari administration. Recent actions of the government suggest that we are about to witness a significant departure from what has been the usual practice of concentrating developmental efforts on some selected sections of the Niger Delta, perhaps because all the noise, threats and actual destruction of oil installations and facilities by armed militants have been coming from those sections. The all-inclusive approach of the federal government to finding lasting solutions to the problems of the entire Niger Delta, not just a few states, is undoubtedly the panacea to the restiveness that has seen the country being held hostage, with the predictability of the rising of the sun.

    The government has started on a good note by engaging stakeholders in the Niger Delta in dialogues that are meant to chart the way forward for the region. One of such activities was the recent tour of the region by the vice president, during which he held town hall meetings with people from all segments of the society. Before then, President Muhammadu Buhari had held a meeting with representatives of the region in Abuja, at which the demands of the people of the region were presented in documentary form.

    If past experience is anything to go by, it will not be surprising to see the government follow up by setting up a committee to draw up a plan of action for implementing the demands of the region, both from the president’s meeting and the vice president’s various town hall meetings. There should be no need for this. The government has a working document to serve as guide for a systematic development of the region, one that would satisfy the yearnings, demands and aspirations of all the communities in the region.

    Timi Alaibe, a former managing director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), has been a one-man advocate for equitable distribution of resources and developmental projects in the region, irrespective of percentage of contribution to the national oil revenue, or degree of negative consequences suffered from oil exploration and production activities. For him, environmental degradation, like oil spill, does not recognize state or community boundaries. Nor is underdevelopment or unemployment concentrated in some sections of the region.

    The former presidential adviser on the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme does not lose any opportunity to speak on the issue of even development of the region wherever he finds it – at public lectures and media interviews.

    Alaibe’s ideas of what are required to ‘liberate’ the Niger Delta from the shackles of underdevelopment and poverty, quite lofty as they come, are encapsulated in the Niger Delta Development Master Plan that he personally authored. The document is a guide for the systematic and sustained development of the region, quite different from the periodic handouts that successive governments have been content to giving the people of the region.

    Though yet to be fully implemented, save for one of the pillars that deal with demobilization, rehabilitation and reintegration of former militants, the Master Plan has remained largely unused. Perhaps the document waited for the Buhari administration that is designing a new approach to solving the problems of the region, to be fully implemented.

    Is it a coincidence that the Senate has just exhumed the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) that had remained buried in its closets for nearly a decade, just when the federal government is trying to design new initiatives to tackle the Niger Delta problem? Perhaps it is not. The PIB and the Niger Delta Master Plan find common grounds in some areas, such as joint ownership of oil infrastructure by communities, which would make them assume full responsibility for its security. There is also the issue of involving oil bearing communities in profit sharing of oil proceeds. Both documents are on the same page on this.

    The federal government must walk its talk by ensuring even distribution of developmental projects in the entire Niger Delta region, which is in line with Alaibe’s recommendations in the Master Plan. This is what would give every community and hamlet in the region a sense of belonging. Some sections should no longer be made to feel that they are the special children that deserve to be pampered, while others pick the crumps that fall from the table.

    If the time has come for the people of the Niger Delta to feel differently (positively) about living in the area that serves as the goose that lays the golden egg, that feeling should spread everywhere.

     

    Ms Adeyeye, an environmental rights activist, lives in Akure

     

     

     

  • Timi Alaibe in the news

    The former Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Timi Alaibe, was once a major player and powerbroker in the Niger Delta region. But one thing led to another and he was betrayed and tamed by the intrigues of the conflict-prone oil producing region. Recently, news circulated that Timi would be named as the Head of President Muhammadu Buhari’s amnesty initiative to end militancy in the region. The news afterwards turned into a ruse.

    Back in his NDDC days, Alaibe was the cock of the walk, the ruler of the roost and the major domo in the pantheon of deep pockets on account of his financial liquidity. He was primus inter pares; the guy with the most expensive and flashiest fleet of cars. Add to these his choice taste in designer apparels, a good body structure to carry clothes off and his good looks, and the Bayelsa native left the ladies gaping, while men wished they could become his acquaintance. Those who flocked around him in his day at the NDDC have disappeared into thin air.

  • Timi Alaibe spotted

    Former Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Timi Alaibe, embraced the calmness of solitude for some time and stayed off the social scene. However, penultimate Sunday, he was sighted at the Ikoyi residence of oil baron, Dapo Abiodun, on the occasion of the latter’s birthday.

    The politician looked every inch his bubbly self and blended so well that there was no indication he had been off the social scene for quite a while. Like the proverbial cat with nine lives, Alaibe seems to have bounced back on his feet. There have also been strong indications of late that he may be drafted back as the head of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, following the seeming inability to curb the activities of militants in the oil-rich region.

  • Alaibe withdraws from Bayelsa guber race

    The former managing director of Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Chief Timi Alaibe, on Wednesday withdrew from the December 5 governorship election in Bayelsa State, citing party interest.

    Alaibe formerly declared his decision to pull out of the rescheduled governorship primary of the All Progressive Congress (APC) in a statement he signed at about 3:00am and entitled: “For the sake of our party, I withdraw from the APC governorship primary.”

    Describing the decision as self-sacrifice, he said it was taken out of his desire to give APC deserved peace and unity ahead of the election.

    Immediately the news of his withdrawal filtered into the state secretariat of the party at about 3:30am, there was jubilation among party faithful and delegates who gathered in large numbers and waited patiently for the primary.

    The development has given the former Governor of the state, Timipre Sylva, a great chance to emerge as APC flag bearer for the election.

    Alaibe said: “It is with all nostalgia that I recall the zeal, enthusiasm and hope with which thousands of Bayelsans made a statement in the direction of change in August 2015. I can also vividly recall a mental replay of the occasion wherein a qualitative representation of the leadership of our great party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) ushered in respected leaders and members from their then party, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    “That singular event has been phenomenal just as its true meaning and direction have all exuded confidence, unity of purpose, cohesion, collectivism and courage. That day undoubtedly marked the beginning of a people’s journey from hopelessness and squandry as enunciated by the accidental PDP-led ‎government in Bayelsa State to that of quality leadership that an APC government will represent.

    “As one of such leaders who took that historic decision, I thought of giving a further bite to my burning desire to extricate the state from‎ abysmal leadership failure. Therefore, my aspiration to be governor after series of consultations was to rekindle our collective hope and lift the state beyond its current state of decay under the PDP.

    “Regardless, I am not oblivious of the fundamental fact that we all need a virile, united, cohesive and collaborative APC to bring about our desires to fruition. Not only do we need this, APC deserves every sacrifice, including personal interests, to arrive at the envisaged destination come February 2016.”

     

  • Alaibe blasts PDP over Bayelsa sanitation row

    A stalwart of the All Progressive Congress (APC) and one of the leading contenders for the party’s governorship ticket, Chief Timi Alaibe, on Saturday lashed out the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) for linking him to a clash in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    Alaibe said he was not even in Bayelsa when the Chairman of the state Environmental Sanitation Authority (BSESA), Mr. Oboku Offorji, claimed that he and other leaders of the APC flouted the sanitation law.

    He said it was obvious that the PDP and its remnants were scared of his membership of the APC, a party he said has come to deliver the state from bad governance.

    Alaibe, the former Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), said the PDP was scared of losing Bayelsa.

    He said the PDP is aware of its looming defeat and that its members have resorted to rabble rousing to seek relevance.

    He said, “I have not been in the state for some days now. But they dropped my name. The report that I violated traffic law is a figment of their imagination. They are scared of me. They are feverish and jittery. I have become their headache and that is why they have been leading smear campaign against me.

    “But I have a message for PDP. We have come to take Bayelsa from them. There is no going back for APC. The PDP will surely go in December 5 because we are totally committed to ensuring the victory of APC.”

  • Bayelsa: PDP defectors are greedy, selfish – Dickson

    The Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson, on Monday gave reasons for last Saturday’s defection of some politicians from the state chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The former Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs, Mr. Nditimi Alaibe, Col. Sam Inokoba, and Senator Heineken Lokpobiri are among the politicians that defected to the APC at the weekend.

    They were received by the National Chairman of the APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun.

    Dickson, who spoke with journalists on the sideline of the 2015 National Security Summit organized by the Nigeria Police Force in conjunction with The Sun Publishing Limited in Abuja, said the politicians moved to the new party on the basis of greediness and selfishness.

    According to him, they are all aiming for the governorship ticket of the APC in order to contest for the Bayelsa governorship poll.

    Stressing that it was within their right to decamp, the governor said for the records, it was important that the public know why they decamped to the APC.

    He said: “They decamped because each one of them wants to be governor and the PDP platform is not available.

    “So, they are going to the next alternative and which in the case of the APC, is the party that has control of the center and by so doing, positioning themselves for federal appointments, which the PDP and I are not in a position to give to them.

    “And they are hoping somehow that federal might, by way of security and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) manipulation will see their eventual flagbearer get into the government house, which is not going to be the case.”

    Claiming that he is firmly on ground in the state, the governor said his people are of the view that his administration has done well and will troop out en mass on election day to vote for him and the PDP.

     

    “We know the antecedents of each and everyone of them and we are confident that the people are not with them,” he added.