The battle for the control of the
Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) took a dramatic turn during the week
with President Muhammadu Buhari allegedly jettisoning the nominees whose names
were confirmed by the Senate on October 29 for the board of the commission.
The Senate-approved board whose
members had been waiting to be inaugurated by the President, was constituted
with inputs from Niger Delta leaders, including the National Chairman of the
All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole; the Deputy Senate
President, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege; former Bayelsa State governor, Niger Delta minister
Senator Goodwill Akpabio and Chief Timipre Sylva, according to The Nation
investigation.
As earlier reported by this
paper, some Presidency officials had told Senator Omo-Agege, who is said to be
very close to the Villa, that President Buhari needed upright and competent
people to run the affairs of the NDDC because he believed that the huge sums
hitherto pumped into the commission had not been well utilised by its managers.
It was on the foregoing basis
that the President called for forensic audit of the commission when the
governors of the states that make up the NCDC, led by Governor Seriake Dickson
of Bayelsa State, paid him a courtesy visit at the Presidential Villa in
October.
Senator Omo-Agege, however, felt
that it would not be fair for him to nominate the commission’s members without
inputs from other Niger Delta leaders. He therefore contacted Oshiomhole,
Sylva, Akpabio and some other Niger Delta leaders who nominated a name each.
The battle for Commission’s key
positions
With members of the Commission’s
board nominated, the bone of contention became whose candidate would occupy the
key positions in the board, particularly the chairman and the managing
director.
As it turned out, the nomination
of Dr. Pius Odubu and Bernard Okumagba, the candidates of Oshiomhole and
Omo-Agege as nominees for the chairman and managing director positions on the
board did not go down well with Akpabio, who felt that as the Minister of Niger
Delta Affairs, his candidate deserved to occupy one of the two positions.
Rather than engage Oshiomhole and
Omo-Agege in a confrontation, Akpabio decided to play a fast one by announcing
the appointment of a three-man interim management committee to manage the
affairs of the commission while the newly constituted board awaited
confirmation by the Senate.
Asked what would happen to the
new board when confirmed by the Senate, Akpabio said they would have to wait to
be sworn in after the interim management committee’s work was done.
Realising how dear Buhari holds
the idea of forensic audit to heart, Akpabio also moved quickly to declare that
his interim management committee would oversee the forensic audit ordered by
the President.
Akpabio’s joker
To further win Buhari’s heart,
Akpabio was said to have demanded from his interim management committee details
of how the former managers of the commission ruined the place.
He was then said to have found
his way into the Presidential Villa and paraded the details before Buhari.
While President Buhari nodded in
approval of Akpabio’s professed disposition to forensic audit of NDDC, the
Acting Managing Director of NDDC , Gboene Nunieh and member of her interim
management board, announced the suspension of the Commission’s monthly payment
of N1 billion to a consultant whose job with NDDC was merely to collect money
from international oil companies (IOCs) on its behalf.
Speaking with reporters at the
NDDC headquarters in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nunieh said the commission
did not need middlemen to collect statutory funds due to it.
She said: “We have a consulting
firm engaged as a collection agent. We have another company that also collects
three per cent whenever money is paid by the International Oil Companies.
“We don’t need a middle man to
collect three percent for gas. The money should just be paid into NDDC accounts
with the CBN.
“That is why I have suspended the
contract of a collection agent. We are no longer going to pay anyone N1 billion
every month. That is wicked.
“That money can put mono pumps in
rural communities in the Niger Delta. It can buy books and set up primary health
centres. The three per cent for a consulting firm is over.”
The acting MD said things were
beginning to look up as many contractors have gone back to site since she took
charge.
She said: “We have about 57
contractors that have gone back to site. I am encouraging everyone to go back
to site so that things will be done properly. Those that actually execute their
contracts will be paid.
“No big contractors. We will get
the locals who are plumbers to get the mono-pumps to work.
“We are going to take development to the
people and that is why you no longer see the young men hanging around our
gates.
“We have asked them to go back to
their communities and we will meet them there.”
Amaechi’s men lose out in battle of wits, fight back
Former Rivers State governor and
Minister of Transportation, Hon. Chibuke Rotimi Amaechi, is said not to be
happy about the goings on at the commission because the dissolved board of the
commission headed by the former Managing Director Nsima Okere, was his
brainchild.
Apparently disappointed that the
former governor has been sidelined, his people are said to be compiling
dossiers on Akpabio’s people who allegedly got contracts in billions but did
not execute them.
They are alleging that Akpabio’s
people have been major players in the commission since it was set up about 18
years ago.
They are claiming that as Akwa
Ibom governor, Akpabio nominated a chairman, a managing director and several
state representatives to the NDDC board between 2007 and 2015. “How did they
run the place?” they asked.
In their view,” the people there
now should be sacked as well for a thorough forensic job to be done. ”
“The President means well for the
Niger Delta. He should get an international firm of auditors to look into the
books of the commission. What will be unearthed will shock Nigerians,” a
leading politician from the region said in Abuja.
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