Tag: IMC

  • NFF extends IMC tenure till end of season

    NFF extends IMC tenure till end of season

    Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has extended the tenure of the Interim Management Committee (IMC) of the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) till the end of the 2022/2023 season.

    Ademola Olajire, NFF’s Director of Communications, disclosed on Friday in a statement that Ibrahim Gusau, the Federation’s President, said the extension was important at this point in time.

    “The extension of IMC’s tenure is in order to allow the team to concentrate fully on the organisation and management of the ongoing NPFL season, which is just heading to its Match Day 3 this weekend,” he quoted Gusau as saying.

    The NFF President had inaugurated the IMC, headed by Gbenga Elegbeleye, on Oct. 21 with an initial mandate of three months.

    Its terms of reference were aimed at engendering a new life generally for the elite division of the Nigerian football league.

    Gusau had at the Draw Ceremony for the 2022/2023 NPFL season on Dec. 28, praised the IMC for the tremendous work it had been doing since inauguration.

    He had assured it of NFF’s support in turning around Nigeria’s domestic League for the better, including fostering a viable football economy.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the IMC has since its inauguration gone on to put in place structures for the league to get underway on Jan. 8.

    Citing the time factor, it had opted for an abridged format for the 2022/2023 NPFL season, with 10 clubs in Group A and 10 clubs in Group B.

    The current season is scheduled to end in May.

  • IMC gives NPFL clubsides N200m ahead of Sunday’s season kick-off

    IMC gives NPFL clubsides N200m ahead of Sunday’s season kick-off

    The Interim Management Committee (IMC) running the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) on Thursday in Abuja handed over a total sum of N200 million to the competition’s season 2022/2023 clubsides.

    According to reports, each of the 20 clubs in the league received N10 million as a form of support.

    The financial support is a grant ahead of participation in the season 2022/2023 competition which begins on Sunday.

    The benefitting clubs include defending champions Rivers United Football Club of Port Harcourt, Shooting Stars FC of Ibadan, Rangers International of Enugu, and Plateau United of Jos.

    Others are Kwara United of Ilorin, Gombe United, El-Kanemi Warriors of Maiduguri, Abia Warriors of Umuahia, Bendel Insurance of Benin and Bayelsa United of Yenagoa.

    There are also Akwa United of Uyo, Wikki Tourists of Bauchi, Nasarawa United of Lafia, Niger Tornadoes of Minna, and Sunshine Stars of Akure.

    The rest are Enyimba International of Aba, Remo Stars of Ikenne, Dakkada FC of Uyo, Doma United of Gombe, and Katsina United FC.

    Speaking at the ceremony, the IMC Chairman, Gbenga Elegbeleye, noted that the development was a fulfillment of the league organising body’s promise.

    “We came into being with a promise to improve the state of the competition.

    “We are here now to do as promised, giving the participating clubs the sum of N10 million each to help kickstart the season.

    “I can promise here again that we are ready to give some money again as the league goes on, in order to help the clubs cushion the financial burden of playing in the competition,” he said.

    Elegbeleye then announced that winners of the competition, which is going to be in an abridged format, will receive as prize the sum of N100 million at the end of this season.

    In his remarks during the cheque presentation, the President of Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), Ibrahim Gusau, said the development was in line with his plan for Nigerian football.

    “Before I came in as NFF President, I had said we must get the league right in order to move forward in the game as a country.

    “So, the issue of having a premier league that is professionally run is important, and that is what we are seeing with the IMC now. This is praiseworthy,” he said.

    Gusau used the opportunity to reiterate NFF’s full support for the IMC, saying the question of playing the 2022/2023 season in an abridged format is a matter of necessity.

    “We need to start the league so as to end it early and start the new season by August.

    “This way, the players will have time to rest and prepare well for the next season and do better on the continent.

    “Luckily for us, IMC has been doing well and the sponsors are set to back them. So, let us give them all the support needed to succeed.

    “That is why I will be in Uyo on Sunday to watch the star match of the Match Day 1 fixtures —- between Akwa United and Bendel Insurance,” he said.

    NAN reports that the season 2022/2023 NPFL will get underway on Sunday with five matches in each of its two groups.

  • NPFL: IMC fixes meeting with NFF President, Club Chairmen, Referee’s union

    NPFL: IMC fixes meeting with NFF President, Club Chairmen, Referee’s union

    The newly inaugurated Interim Management Committee (IMC) that is responsible for overseeing the affairs of the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) has scheduled a meeting with the Nigeria Football Federation President, Ibrahim Gusau, Club Chairmen, and the Nigeria Referee’s Association, (NRA)

    Moreso, this is to enable the stakeholders deliberate on issue-based discourse as it concerns the new abridged  2022/2023 season.

    This development was made known via a circular signed and released by NPFL’s Head of Operations, Davidson Owuni

    Similarly, the meeting is to further discuss logistics for the new NPFL season as it concerns club sides in the country.

    The meeting is scheduled to hold on Thursday 5th January at the Sandrallia Hotel, Jabi Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, (FCT)

     

  • Gusau hails IMC after colourful NPFL draw in Abuja

    Gusau hails IMC after colourful NPFL draw in Abuja

    President of the Nigeria Football Federation, Alhaji Ibrahim Musa Gusau has applauded the Interim Management Committee of the Nigeria Professional Football League for its efforts to reposition the Nigeria League, following the conduct of the Draw for the new Season in Abuja on Wednesday.

    At the colourful ceremony held inside the press conference hall of the Sandralia Hotel, the 20 NPFL teams were calibrated into two different groups for the purpose of the abridged League season, already approved by the NFF.

    “Let me state clearly that the NFF is satisfied with the efforts the IMC headed by Hon. Gbenga Elegbeleye has been making to rebrand and reposition the NPFL since its inauguration. The NFF commends the IMC Chairman and all his members for the highly successful pre-season tournament held earlier in the month, and also for the actualisation of this Draw Ceremony.

    “The commitment to engineer changes that will deliver a vibrant Nigeria League and a viable football economy in the country remains as firm as ever. The NFF will continue to provide the necessary support to the IMC to fulfill its terms of reference in flying colours,” Gusau said. He was represented at the event by the NFF’s Director of Communications, Mr. Ademola Olajire.

    The Honourable Minister of Youth and Sports Development, Chief Sunday Dare was represented by his Chief of Staff, Alhaji Abba Abdullahi Yola.

    Chairman of the IMC, Hon. Gbenga Elegbeleye revealed that the organizers have secured a sponsor to foot the indemnities of match officials for the next three years, with the payments to be done directly from the company to the appointed match officials.

    “We are committed to eradicating the malaise of indebtedness to match officials, which compromises them and lowers their morale to do the right thing.

    “The IMC has also increased the winner’s prize for the season to the sum of N100 Million, which is a hundred percent increase on what was in place previously.”

    The Draw Ceremony grouped the 20 teams into two pools of A and B, with Matchday 1 set for 8th January 2023.

    GROUP A

    Kwara United

    Nasarawa United

    Plateau United

    Gombe United

    El-Kanemi Warriors

    Enyimba FC

    Akwa United

    Bendel Insurance

    Shooting Stars

    Remo Stars

    GROUP B

    Niger Tornadoes

    Doma United

    Wikki Tourists

    Lobi Stars

    Rivers United

    Abia Warriors

    Dakkada FC

    Rangers Int’l

    Sunshine Stars

    Bayelsa United

    MATCHDAY 1 (A)

    Nasarawa United Vs Enyimba FC

    Akwa United Vs Bendel Insurance

    Plateau United Vs Shooting Stars

    Kwara United Vs Gombe United

    Remo Stars Vs El-Kanemi Warriors

    MATCHDAY 1 (B)

    Bayelsa United Vs Dakkada FC

    Wikki Tourists Vs Niger Tornadoes

    Doma United Vs Sunshine Stars

    Rivers United Vs Lobi Stars

    Rangers Int’l Vs Abia Warriors

  • Set forth now despite COVID-19, seek opportunity in pain points but avoid complacency, experts advise on midsize IMC journey

    Set forth now despite COVID-19, seek opportunity in pain points but avoid complacency, experts advise on midsize IMC journey

    Find the courage to set forth now, despite the ravages of Covid19, carve a niche, but avoid complacency as you make a mark as a midsize communication agency.

    That is the counsel of the two communication experts headlining the Jacksonites Webinar on Communication Trends on Sunday 13 September as they offered a sneak peek into what they will share with participants. Their counsel is for young and not-so-young persons in IMC thinking of entrepreneurship.

    Charles Monwuba, Managing Director of Advalue Limited, asserts that “Starting up a medium-sized ad agency is a firewall against unemployment because of the vast opportunities therein. The features are low start-up cost, speed and power. Unstructured firms are looking for solutions to meet their tough targets. With your laptop and phone, you are off to a great start.”

    Mrs Olayemi Nwobodo, the Managing Consultant of Waien Communications Consult, said entrepreneurs and managers should focus on the pain points for the opportunities therein. “In the current economic climate which has been characterised by uncertainty even before the Coronavirus pandemic, it is important for business owners not to lose hope but rather realise they need to adapt to the changing times. This is important not only for small and medium scale outfits but also for clients who give them jobs and contracts.”

    Mrs Nwobodo added, “A key takeaway from this seminar is that we must diversify our portfolio and learn to work smart. Those who focused on one line of business will find that that line seems to have dried up. But there are still needs to be met, problems requiring solving and where to make money. It means that we must be curious to know what pain people and businesses are going through, which ones we can solve and how we can make money doing so.”

    Monwuba cautions against complacency as a factor in the Achilles Heel of entrepreneurs in the sector. “The pitfall to avoid is complacency. With a client, a small agency can pay its bills”. But watch it, he says.

    Find out the average time a small agency can keep an account, what sectors are trending and profitable and where IMC firms can look towards for businesses in this era.

    Drink from a deep and rich pool of knowledge and expertise distilled as wisdom at the Jacksonites Webinar On Communication Trends on the Zoom Platform on Sunday 13 September.

    Previous speakers at the Jacksonites Webinar on Communication Trends have included Prof Pat Utomi of the Centre for Values in Leadership, Mr Ugo Onuoha, former managing director of Champion Newspapers Limited and Mr Mayor Ikoroha, a communications and leadership consultant. Others are Mr Nn’Emeka Madugbuna, Chairman of C7F Porter Novelli and Dr Marcel Mbamalu, Group News Editor of The Guardian.

    The Jacksonites Alumni Association runs the webinar as part of its objective to lead the discourse on issues in communication as the first university department in West Africa to teach journalism to degree-level. Members are alumni of the Department of Mass Communication of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka.

    Media partners of the Jacksonites Webinar on Communication Trends are TheNewsGuru.com, The Nigerian Express, crediblenews.com and theindexng.com.

  • NDDC: President Buhari should act on the IMC indictment for corruption, By Ebi Arogbofa

    NDDC: President Buhari should act on the IMC indictment for corruption, By Ebi Arogbofa

     

    BY Ebi Arogbofa

    At the just ended retreat for his ministers at which they reviewed their first year performances, President Muhammadu Buhari was upbeat that his administration has shown probity and accountability in the manner it has tackled the problem of corruption. To a partisan watcher of the president, he may have got accolades but not to a dispassionate Nigerian who has witnessed the massive erosion of credibility under the president, especially on the issues of public trust.

    Examples abound that Nigerians are not swayed by the self-adulation of the president who seems fixated on his own self assessment against the reality of corruption in agencies under his watch. Nowhere is this better seen than at the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) where an interim management committee appointed by his administration to midwife the forensic audit of the commission has been indicted for corruption, financial recklessness and mismanagement by the Nigerian Senate after an open and transparent investigation where Nigerians were treated to an arrogant display of corrupt entitlement by the directors of the IMC led by its Acting Managing Director Professor Kemebradikumo Pondei and Acting Executive Director projects Dr Cairo Ojougboh.

    While Prof. Pondei told a shocked nation and the international community at the Senate Committee Public Hearing that, among others, the IMC shared out the sum of N1.5 billion to itself and staff as bonuses for the Covid-19 disease pandemic; Dr Ojougboh in various newspaper interviews, not only justified this curious expenditure but said it was standard practice under the Buhari administration, in an interview published by The Vanguard newspaper of August 31, 2020.

    Meanwhile, between February, when the expanded IMC under the leadership of Pondei was appointed, and May, the IMC members paid themselves N302 million as Tour Duty Allowances, at a time much of the country, including the NDDC office, was locked down on account of the Covid-19 pandemic!

    So far, the investigations conducted by the Senate and House of Representatives have laid out fraudulent and questionable payments of N81.5 billion by the IMC under the supervision of the Niger Delta minister Chief Godswill Akpabio. This is a clear looting of the resources of the NDDC and the Senate which concluded its investigations in July, was unequivocal when it resolved unanimously that the IMC members must refund N4 923 billion that was criminally spent and be prosecuted for fraud. The Senate resolution also resolutely addressed the illegality of the IMC, which it said should be disbanded and the Governing Board inaugurated, to allow for the proper functioning of the governance structures at the Commission. The Resolution also touched on the forensic audit of the NDDC and other items with recommendations to guide the proper administration of the Commission and the audit.

    The Senate Committee report showed that in the space of eight months, between October 2019 and May 2020, as gleaned from the NDDC account statements, the IMC approved and disbursed the following: N1.12 billion for publicity, N1.3 billion for Community relations, and N475 million, which the IMC said was used to buy hand sanitizer and face masks for the police. In his testimony, the Acting Managing Director Prof Pondei said the IMC paid themselves and staff a Covid-19 ‘palliative allowance’ of N1.5 billion despite receiving their normal salaries and allowances! In addition Pondei takes home N51 million monthly as allowances, while Ojougboh takes home an additional N18 million monthly as allowances. Ojougboh told The Vanguard recently that the N51 million Pondei collects monthly is to feed 100 policemen attached to him!

    Despite the investigations and uproar that greeted the questionable manner it went about disbursing the N81.5 billion between February 2019 and May 2020, the IMC is not done with dubious expenditures.

    At a press conference on Monday, September 7, 2020, Mr Kolawole Johnson of the anti-corruption group, Act for Positive Transformation Initiative (ACTI) detailed fresh illegal and unbudgeted expenditures by the IMC in the last two months since the close of the Senate investigation that shows crass impunity and disregard for laid-down financial rules and regulations and for the constitution (spending money without an approved budget). Johnson, who is the NGO’s Director of Research, Strategy and Programmes, in a statement under the heading ‘STOP THE FREE LOOTING IN NDDC, FREEZE COMMISSION’S ACCOUNTS NOW!’, said the IMC has been moving funds out of the NDDC accounts through fraudulent and non-existent contracts, despite the absence of an approved 2020 budget. According to the group, the commission has gone ahead to squander additional 9 (Nine) Billion Naira in the last one month in fraudulent and fictitious payments.

    Johnson details the illegal and fraudulent payments to include “reckless spendthrift of 5.8 Billion Naira on fraudulent emergency desilting on the 29th of July, 2020, alone when the nation was on holidays. They were so much in a hurry that they moved out the same amount purportedly for different locations and different scopes of job. i.e Emergency clearing and desilting of Ipinle Ajenrela creek, Igbokoda (lot 3) –N634,761,500.00 (Six Hundred and Thirty Four Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty One Thousand, Five Hundred Thousand Naira), Emergency clearing and desilting of Akaibiri creek, Yenagoa – N634,761,500.00 ( Six Hundred and Thirty Four Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty One Thousand, Five Hundred Thousand Naira), Emergency clearing and desilting of Ilar Creek, Igbokoda (lot 2) – N634,761,500.00 ( Six Hundred and Thirty Four Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty One Thousand, Five Hundred Thousand Naira), Emergency clearing and desilting of Temetan Creek, Igbokoda (Lot 1) – N634,761,500.00 ( Six Hundred and Thirty Four Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty One Thousand, Five Hundred Thousand Naira). Others include: Emergency clearing and desilting of blocked canal from Ilaje High School Naval Base fishing Terminal, Igbokoda (Lot1) – N634,761,500.00 ( Six Hundred and Thirty Four Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty One Thousand, Five Hundred Thousand Naira), Emergency clearing and desilting of Yewa Creek, Okitipupa (Lot1) – N634,761,500.00 (Six Hundred and Thirty Four Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty One Thousand, Five Hundred Thousand Naira), Emergency clearing and desilting of Ipinle Koforawe Creek, Igbokoda (lot 2) –N634,761,500.00 (Six Hundred and Thirty Four Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty One Thousand, Five Hundred Thousand Naira). The last on the roll on that same day: Urgent clear desilting of blocked sections of Ibelebiri waterways, Ogbia (lot 2) – N739,071,500.00 (Seven Hundred and Thirty-Nine Million, Seventy-One Thousand and Five Hundred Naira).”

    It is outrageous that “Despite the outcry against the ‘1.5 Billion Naira Palliative to take care of themselves,’ the commission abused the nation further by paying self another 340 Million Naira (Three Hundred and Forty Million Naira) for “EMERGENCY INTERVENTION AGAINST THE SPREAD OF CORONAVIRUS AMONG COMMISSION’S WORKFORCE” on the 8th of August.” The NGO rightly demands that, “Every staff or appointee of the commission that received the money into their private accounts should be made to refund.” According to Johnson, “they are: Okpozo Edgar (N23.6 Million), Akopunwane Stanley (N23.6 Million), Fobruku Monica (N23.6 Million), Oputa Philomena (N23.6 Million). Others are Akpabio Idara (N20.96 Million), Margaret Ala (N20.96 Million) Okezie Irene (N20.96 Million). Also, Ironbar Linda (N20.06 Million), Bello Mary (N20.06 Million), Chidinma Lily (N20.06 Million), Agala Asela (N20.06 Million), Ojigbare Nancy (N20.06 Million), Umezuruke Anthony (N20.06 Million), Imoni Ahuna (20.06 Million), Anako Ajumoke (N12.91 Million). A senior director in the commission, who was recently led to the bank to refund his share of the scholarship fund surreptitiously looted, also received 25 Million Naira into his private account from the above emergency covid-19 largesse. Many other fraudulent payments were made in the month of August under review, including additional payment of 123 Million Naira to Julius Dinga Ltd, on the 18th of August, bringing the total payment on this singular contract scam to 624 Million Naira to the same company. The monumental fraud ongoing in the commission is being supervised by the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Godswill Akpabio.”

    It is interesting that the NGO, which blew the whistle that led to the National Assembly investigations between May and July this year, said the details of all the companies that served as conduit for these payments are readily available. The above are in addition to reckless mismanagement at the NDDC where the IMC has been secretly employing staff, including Assistant Directors without following civil service rules and guidelines.

    The IMC is clearly following a pattern. In its 121-page Report, which was adopted as a resolution of the Senate on July 23, 2020, the Senate Committee found that the IMC made withdrawals in the name of contracts that could not be verified. These fictitious contract payments ran into billions of naira. It therefore recommended that the IMC should refund the sum of N4.923 Billion to the Federation Account. Among the payments made, the Senate discovered that the Pondei-led IMC on April 15, 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown paid out N1.96 billion purportedly for the procurement of Lassa Fever Personal Protection kits purportedly for the 185 LGAs of the NDDC states. Yet, the IMC, which said rather strangely that it used staff of the NDDC to distribute them, could not produce evidence of delivery of these kits to any of the 185 LGAs. Everything spoke to the fact that this was a fictitious unexecuted contract, which was used to steal and launder money from the NDDC. The IMC failed to provide a single name of at least one recipient out of the 185 LGAs to whom the kits were purportedly handed over. It was self-evident that the fictitious contract, which was paid for by the IMC on April 15, 2020, was a conduit to steal the said N1.96 billion.

    The NDDC IMC probe has revealed malfeasance on a scale never imagined before. Buhari’s inaction so far cannot be for want of evidence, which are amply provided by the Senate report and resolutions, and revelations by whistle-blowing anti-corruption Civil Society Organisations such as ACTI.

    The Acting MD Prof Keme Pondei and his IMC colleagues should not remain in office a day longer. We cannot afford delayed action by the president, which gives these officials that have abused public trust such as Akpabio and the IMC more time to commit further infractions, when there are already established indictment for fraud, corruption, self-enrichment, financial recklessness, abuse of due process and mismanagement against them. It is the evidence that sits the president’s logic of having done enough in the fight against corruption on its head.

    Indeed, Nigerians are eagerly awaiting the action of Mr. President on the worrisome on-going contract scams, financial recklessness, corruption, abuse of office and mismanagement being perpetrated at the NDDC. President Buhari cannot continue to act like humongous corruption has become the synonym for his Government. By delaying action, he is emboldening the Niger Delta Minister, Chief Godswill Akpabio, and the IMC to continue the pillage of the NDDC, as was clearly exposed during the National Assembly investigations as part of their oversight duty, and subsequent revelations by anti corruption civil society organisations as detailed above.

    The ball is squarely in the court of President Buhari to act. He cannot play the ostrich on this issue of the IMC corruption. He should step up to the plate and show that he truly abhors corruption.

    Ebi Arogbofa is the Director of Research and Communication at Transparency and Accountability Advancement Group

  • N2.5bn refund: You are bunch of confused men, Nwaoboshi replies NDDC

    N2.5bn refund: You are bunch of confused men, Nwaoboshi replies NDDC

    Senator Peter Nwaoboshi last night urged the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to go to court over its demand that he should refund N2.5 billion being payment for unexecuted projects.

    Nwaoboshi, who represents Delta North in the Senate, in a statement by his media aide, Awele Onokwai, said that the Interim Management Committee (IMC) of the agency appeared confused.

    The statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to the purported subject matter above, credited to one Peter Claver Okoro, Esq, posing as the Director, Legal Services of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) and we make bold to state the following:

    “That the purported matter is subjudice as it is already before two law courts of competent jurisdiction in Nigeria, wherein, Distinguished Senator Peter Nwaoboshi sued the NDDC, Mr Charles Odili and relevant newspapers for defamation of character.

    “The purported letter addressed to the Distinguished Senator Peter Nwaoboshi was written on the 5th of July 2020 and as at today, 7th of August 2020, said letter has not reached Senator Peter Nwaoboshi – either in person or Office or by substitution.

    “The purported letter, unlike any formal letter emanating from a recognized government Ministry, Agency or Department is not signed, therefore, can easily be denied.

    “Nowhere in the contents of the purported letter was it stated that the contractor is directly linked to Distinguished Senator Peter Nwaoboshi.

    “Nowhere in the purported letter was it stated that the warehouse, where the plastic chairs were domiciled belongs to Distinguished Senator Peter Nwaoboshi.

    “The purported letter is absolutely fake, as it was not conveyed through the official letter-headed paper of the NDDC – apparently for fear of being sued for divulgence of fake information to the general public.

    “We are also not ruling out media urchins who may have been recruited by the desperate members of the IMC of NDDC in an attempt to divert public attention from the humongous corruption charges hanging on their necks.

    “Finally, we have always maintained that the IMC of NDDC are a bunch of confused men without vision or direction. Initially, the alleged figure was pegged at N3.7 billion only for the confused IMC Team to now come up with a totally different figure of N2.5 billion.

    “Nigerians and the entire world could see the charade clearly, even through the eyes of Steve Wonder!

    However, if the IMC of NDDC feel they truly have a genuine case against Senator Peter Nwaoboshi as contained in the purported letter, we are challenging them to go to the law court or make use of every legal procedure available to them.

  • NDDC: Senate panel calls for dissolution of IMC

    NDDC: Senate panel calls for dissolution of IMC

    The Senate ad hoc committee set up to unravel the alleged financial recklessness by the Interim Management Committee of the Niger Delta Development Commission has recommended its dissolution.

    The panel also recommended that the NDDC should be returned to the Presidency for direct supervision.

    It also said the monitoring and advisory bodies recognised by the Act which established the NDDC, should be inaugurated immediately.

    It lamented the extra-budgetary spending by the IMC which it noted was affecting the people of the Niger Delta.

    It noted that the Ministry of Niger Delta has no capacity to implement the forensic audit and therefore demanded that the Auditor General of the Federation should supervise the forensic audit for transparency and efficiency.

    It also said the Auditor General should appoint internationally renowned audit experts to carry out the exercise.

    It added that the N1.4bn spent on COVID -19 by the IMC should be refunded to the NDDC account.

    The senators are currently debating the report of the panel at the end of which the Senate would make a decision on it.

  • NDDC: Sagay wants IMC sacked, governing board inaugurated

    NDDC: Sagay wants IMC sacked, governing board inaugurated

    Following the roiling saga of the large scale fraud, financial recklessness and incompetence of the Interim Management Committee of the NDDC, more leaders of the Niger Delta region have questioned the propriety of having the IMC in place and called for its disbandment.

    Giving his view on the saga, the Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay, has called on President Muhammadu Buhari to sack the Interim Management Committee of the Niger Delta Development Commission.

    Speaking with Channels TV, Prof Sagay said: “I will suggest that everybody there should be cleared out so that a permanent board and management can be established in the place that will then be monitored. My view is that everybody should be removed right now.”

    Going further, Sagay questioned the rationale in not putting in place a substantive Board to manage the Commission and supervise the forensic audit, which the president ordered. In his words, “I do not see why forensic auditing cannot take place when you have a regular Board. I don’t see the point in having this temporary (Interim Management Committee) which is an anomaly and which has proved to be a disaster.”

    Niger Delta groups have long called on the president to disband the IMC which was pushed by the Niger Delta Minister Godswill Akpabio to supervise the forensic audit, but which has proven to be a smokescreen for mind boggling stealing and mismanagement. The groups argue that the IMC is illegal since there is no provision for it in the NDDC Act. In October 2019, President Buhari nominated members for the Governing Board of the NDDC, 15 of whom were confirmed by the Senate on November 5, 2019.

    The ongoing investigation by committees of the Senate and House of Representatives has uncovered financial recklessness, abuse of office and incompetence by the IMC in the last eight months since it was appointed.

  • NDDC: Rep tells Buhari to enlarge IMC

    NDDC: Rep tells Buhari to enlarge IMC

    …says as presently constituted both states have no representation,

    ..so far we have been marginalised in projects distribution due to non-inclusion in the cttee

    A member representing Ukwa East West Federal Constituency, of Abia State, Hon Uzoma Nkem-Abonta on Monday asked President Muhammadu Buhari to enlarge the Interim Management Committee, IMC of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC to accommodate Abia and Imo states.

    The fourth timer in the House of Reps, in a chat with Thenewsguru.com, TNG, said his state, Abia and Imo have been grossly marginalised as they have no voice in the present configuration of IMC.

    He explained that”I have seen the publications of most payments made by IMC and all the emergency contracts all paid for, visibly not included remains Abia and Imo.

    “The two states are oil producing though with small production quota nevertheless are being marginalised.


    The IMC as constiitutted leaves the both states without representation, therefore making the state vulnerable and nobody to speak for the states at board meetings where monies and projects are shared and paid.

    “No wonder in the long list of over 80 billion naira purportedly spent both states were not accommodated.

    “Curiously, the budget 2019 that was selectively performed the states in question lacked and disadvantaged as nobody in the board to select or speak on their behalf.

    “The scramble for payments and contract distribution left the states with little or nothing.

    “Curiously again, both states share similar peculiarities having one local government producing oil that is Ukwa Federal Constituency in Abia and Ohaji/Egbema Federal Constituency in Imo state.

    “Both local governments suffer terrible poor inclusion in project sharing.

    “This is an appeal to Mr President to include both states for the sake of equity.