Tag: NDDC

  • Olu of Warri denies N4bn donation to road project

    Olu of Warri denies N4bn donation to road project

    The Olu of Warri, Oba Tsola Emiko, the Ogiame Atuwatse III has denied donating the sum of N4 billion for the completion of the ongoing construction of Koko-Ogheye Road Project in Warri-North Council Area, Delta State.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Koko-Ogheye Road Project was awarded by the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to Levant Construction Company.

    However, the project, which was recently visited by the Olu of Warri, had been abandoned for years allegedly due to paucity of funds.

    Following the visit, reports went round on the social media that the Olu donated N4 billion to complete road project.

    In a statement on Saturday by Chief Clement Maleghemi, the Director, Palace Administration, the palace said the Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse III did not make any promise to contribute any amount to the Koko-Ogheye road project or any project during his visit.

    The statement, titled, “Ògiame Atúwátse III – The Olú of Warri did not splash Billions of Naira on any Federal Road Project,” the Palace said: “As part of a familiarisation visit of Federal Government projects in the Warri Kingdom, Ogíame Atúwátse III, the Olú of Warri recently visited the Koko-Ogheye Road Project (amongst other projects) in Warri North Local Government Area of Delta State.

    “During the site visit, Ògiame had open discussions with representatives of the contractor, Levant Construction Company, and all conversations were in the open and at no time did Ògiame make a promise or indicate he will contribute any amount to the Koko-Ogheye road project or any of such project.

    “The Olu of Warri is eager (like all responsible leaders should be) to have all projects completed in record time, Ògiame also understands the difficulties the current economic situation places on the scarce resources available to the government.”

  • Special police barracks named after Buhari in Rivers State

    Special police barracks named after Buhari in Rivers State

    The new Special Protection Unit Base 6 barracks built and donated by Niger Delta Development Commission to the Nigeria Police Force in Omagwa, Rivers State, has been renamed the President Muhammadu Buhari Nigeria Police (Special Protection Unit) Base 6 Barracks.

    The complex, made up of a commander’s quarters, 68 residential flats, offices and other facilities, would be commissioned by the President on Tuesday.

    Announcing this in Abuja, the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Godswill Obot Akpabio, said the renaming was done in recognition of President Muhammadu Buhari’s commitment towards enthroning peace and security in the Niger Delta region.

    Senator Akpabio said that President Buhari directed that the barracks, begun several years ago, should be completed quickly to boost the work of the Nigeria Police Force in the Niger Delta, as well as efforts at facilitating sustainable regional development.

    He commended the Interim Administrator of the NDDC, Mr Efiong Akwa for heeding the directive of the Federal Government, stating that “the new NDDC is renewing the confidence of Niger Deltans in Government’s seriousness to bring development to the communities.”

    He added: “This is one of a few projects NDDC is completing and commissioning, post the forensic audit exercise. It shows that we are on the right track and that the Niger Delta will enjoy more of the government’s efforts to improve living conditions of the region and restore hope in the people.”

  • Buhari given 14 days to publish looters of NDDC’s N6T

    Buhari given 14 days to publish looters of NDDC’s N6T

    President Muhammadu Buhari has been given a 14-day ultimatum to publish the names of those indicted in the misappropriation of over N6 trillion in Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    The looting occurred between 2000 and 2019, as documented in the recent Forensic Audit Report on NDDC.

    Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) gave the ultimatum, threatening legal action to force the disclosure of the looters.

    The group asked Buhari to direct the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Mr Abubakar Malami to publish the looters’ list.

    SERAP also urged Buhari “to direct Mr Malami and appropriate anti-corruption agencies to promptly bring to justice anyone suspected to be responsible for the missing N6 trillion, and to fully recover any misappropriated public funds.”

    In the open letter dated 25 September 2021 and signed by SERAP deputy director Kolawole Oluwadare, the organisation said: “It is in the public interest to promptly publish the names of those indicted in the audit report, and to ensure that they face prosecution, as appropriate.”

    “Taking these decisive steps would advance the victims’ right to restitution, compensation and guarantee of non-repetition, as well as improve public confidence in the fight against corruption.”

    “Using the audit report to genuinely combat the corruption epidemic in the NDDC and rein in those indicted would alleviate poverty, improve access of Nigerians to basic public goods and services, and enhance the ability of your government to meet its human rights and anti-corruption obligations.”

    The letter, read in part: “Despite the country’s enormous oil wealth, ordinary Nigerians have derived very little benefit from trillions of naira budgeted for socio-economic development in the region primarily because of widespread grand corruption, and the entrenched culture of impunity of perpetrators.”

    “The level of grand corruption in the NDDC, and the devastating effects on poor Nigerians are serious enough to meet the requirements of crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, to which Nigeria is a state party.”

    “The public interest in publishing the names of those indicted by the audit report outweighs any considerations to withhold the information, as there would be no prejudice against those whose names are published as long as the information is appropriately framed and truthful.”

    “The audit report raises prima facie evidence of grand corruption and its staggering effects in the Niger Delta. Nigerians have the right to know the names of those indicted and other details in the report, as guaranteed under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the Freedom of Information Act.”

    “Publishing widely the report and the names of those indicted would remove the possibility of obstruction of justice, and provide insights relevant to the public debate on the ongoing efforts to combat grand corruption and the longstanding impunity of perpetrators in the country.”

    “Nigerians are entitled to the right to receive information without any interference or distortion, and the enjoyment of this right should be based on the principle of maximum disclosure, and a presumption that all information is accessible subject only to a narrow system of exceptions.”

    “According to public interest test, even if the government demonstrates that the publication of the names of public officials would substantially harm a legitimate interest, it is nevertheless obliged to disclose the requested information if, as it is the case here, the public interest in disclosure is sufficient enough to overweigh any perceived harm.”

    “We would be grateful if the recommended measures are taken within 14 days of the receipt and/or publication of this letter. If we have not heard from you by then, the Incorporated Trustees of SERAP shall take all appropriate legal actions to compel your government to comply with our request in the public interest.”

    “Misappropriation of public funds meant to ensure access to basic public goods and services rises to the level of crimes against humanity, as this has forced millions of Nigerians in the region to live in inhumane or degrading conditions, in violation of the Rome Statute.”

    “According to our information, the Forensic Audit Report into the activities of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) reveals grim allegations of misappropriation of N6 trillion in the commission between 2000 and 2019, and that there are over 13,000 abandoned projects in the Niger Delta.”

    “According to the report, the NDDC operated a total of 362 bank accounts, which resulted in a ‘lack of proper reconciliation of accounts.’”

    “The missing N6 trillion and over 13,000 abandoned projects in the Niger Delta have continued to have a negative impact on the human rights of Nigerians, undermining their access to basic public goods and services, such as education, healthcare, and regular and uninterrupted electricity supply.”

    “Public schools have been left to crumble and wither away, and health care facilities in several parts of the region lack even the most basic of amenities.”

    “Section 15 subsection (5) of the Constitution requires your government to abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of power. The UN Convention against Corruption requires your government to ensure effective prosecution of allegations of corruption.”

    “Specifically, article 26 of the convention requires your government to ensure “effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions” including criminal and non-criminal sanctions, in cases of grand corruption. Article 26 complements the more general requirement of article 30, paragraph 1, that sanctions must take into account the gravity of the corruption allegations.”

    The letter was copied to Mr Malami; Professor Bolaji Owasanoye SAN, Chairman Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC); Abdulrasheed Bawa, Chairman, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

  • NDDC audit: Nigerians demand quick action against corrupt officials, contractors

    NDDC audit: Nigerians demand quick action against corrupt officials, contractors

    …ask FG to reconstitute NDDC board immediately

    …demand arrest of NASS members, civil servants and public servants involved in milking the commission dry

    Barely a week after receiving the forensic audit report of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Nigerians have continued to demand prompt action by President Muhammadu Buhari against officials, contractors, and individuals indicted by the report which exposed brazen criminality and fraud in the execution of 13,777 projects.

    It will be recalled that President Buhari had in October 2019 ordered forensic auditing of the Commission due to reports of endemic corruption since its establishment, but received the audit report last Thursday.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports during an anti-corruption radio program, PUBLIC CONSCIENCE on RADIO, produced by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development, PRIMORG, on Wednesday in Abuja, the Executive Director, Citizens Advocacy For Social & Economic Rights, Frank Tietie revealed that his expectation and that of the people from the Niger Delta region is to see President Buhari-led Federal Government speedily employ all legal means in arresting all and sundry implicated by the report; seize their ill-gotten properties, monies and return them to the people.

    Disclosing his expectations now that the NDDC audit report is on the president’s table, Tietie had these to say: “We don’t want time to be wasted, I am looking forward to properties that will be temporarily and finally forfeited to the Federal Government, sold and the money taken back to the NDDC.

    “We are looking at a situation where current members of the National Assembly, members of the Federal Executive Council, Federal Public Servants, and Civil Servants will be arrested immediately and imprisoned.

    “We want a speedy trial, we want to see people sent to prison, seize their properties, sell their properties, give the money back to the NDDC, “He stressed.

    Tietie expressed optimism that the government will act on the audit report that has set up the audit committee themselves, noting that even if President Buhari refuses to take action on the report the laws of Nigeria will.

    He commended PRIMORG for their boldness in bringing such discourse of national importance to public knowledge while disclosing that his rights group will continue to urge citizens to be alert on government spending and holding their leaders accountable.

    “You must shine your eyes as someone from Niger Delta with regards to budget, whether it is in the state, federal or in the NDDC; You must know the roads and bridges to be built and when they are not built you call me or call PRIMORG to talk about it,” Tietie advised.

    On his part, Darlington Nwauju who lives in Rivers State called on President Buhari to constitute the NDDC board urgently, as it will help reduce the corruption in the commission.

    “Mr. President should constitute the board for the NDDC, because there are a plethora of audit reports that have been done before now inside the NDDC, so, the constituted board should work with these reports to better the lives of the people of the region.

    Towing the same line, another of the Niger Delta, Umuakpo Ovie who spoke from Delta State said that a well-constituted board of the commission will reduce the malfeasance that has impoverished the people of the region. Adding that interim management boards of the NDDC oversaw the abandonment of many emergency road constructions in recent times.

    Ovie disclosed that going forward, people from the region will hold leaders accountable, “just as we are agitating for President Buhari to act on the forensic audit report, that is how we must come together to hold political leaders, traditional leaders, and opinion leaders accountable and ask them questions.

    “The criminality is too much, how can they spend N6 trillion, and today there is no development in the region,” he lamented.

    Public Conscience is a syndicated weekly anti-corruption radio program used by PRIMORG to draw government and citizens’ attention to corruption and integrity issues in Nigeria.
    The program is supported by the MacArthur Foundation.

  • NDDC hands over former headquarters to Rivers govt

    NDDC hands over former headquarters to Rivers govt

    The Secretary to Rivers State Government, Dr. Tammy Wenike Danagogo, has reassured Federal Government Agencies in Rivers State of Governor Nyesom Wike’s support in helping them productively fulfill their mandate for the benefit of the people.

    Danagogo gave the guarantee in Port Harcourt while receiving the keys of the former NDDC headquarters during a handover ceremony by the Interim Administrator of the Commission, Mr. Effiong Akwa on Wednesday.

    He noted that all the Federal Government agencies that have been committed to their policies in positively affecting Rivers people and Nigerians at large have enjoyed the support of the State Government.

    “We are grateful and assure you that His Excellency, Nyesom Wike will be impressed with your candor and vibrancy in attending to the issue of the handover, being mindful of the Commission’s good relationship with the Rivers State Government.

    “I thank you for personally ensuring that the facility is secure and handed over to me in person. This shows you appreciate relationships.

    “Over the years, the Rivers State Government has always supported and cooperated with Federal Government agencies that operate in the State and have continued to do so with more vigor under the administration of Governor Nyesom Wike, who intends to continue in this manner.

    “We are impressed that the NDDC has been able to maintain the cordial relationship with the Rivers Government in utilizing the state’s facility and, in a peaceful and friendly manner handed over to us,” he stressed.

    Earlier, the Interim Administrator of NDDC, Mr. Effiong Akwa, had commended the Rivers State Government for its hospitability, accommodation, and assistance to the Commission for over 15 years.

    “We have been here for the past 15 years and leaving this place peacefully. I have received a lot of support from the Governor of Rivers State, Barr. Nyesom Wike, who is popularly referred to as Mr. Project,” he stressed.

    Akwa disclosed that the NDDC has further decided to partner with the Rivers State Government in the construction of the road leading to its new headquarters at the Eastern Bypass axis of Port Harcourt.

    “We have also decided to partner on the road project leading to our new head office at the appropriate time. This is one government that has given support to the NDDC. It is on record that it is during his tenure; we have not had kidnapping or obstruction during the construction of the headquarters because of the maximum support from the Government and people of Rivers State.

    “For this reason, we are here to say thank you, and ask that the cordial relationship will continue and that the subsequent government will toe the line of the governor in bringing life to the people of Rivers State.

    “With the attitude of the Rivers State Government, we know this place will be remodelled and put to better use. We have also left behind the 4 units of lift, water supply unit, and fire service equipment as well as security to prevent vandalism,” he concluded.

     

  • NDDC received N6trn allocation in 19 years – FG

    NDDC received N6trn allocation in 19 years – FG

    The Federal Government on Thursday said it allocated N6trn to the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) between 2001 and 2019.

    Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) Abubakar Malami made the comment when he got the forensic audit report of the NDDC from his Niger Delta counterpart Godswill Akpabio.

    “It is on record that between 2001 and 2019, the Federal Government has approved N3, 375, 735,776,794.93 as budgetary allocation and N2,420,948,894,191.00 as Income from Statutory and Non Statutory Sources, which brings the total figure to the sum of approximately N6 trillion given to the Niger Delta Development Commission,” Malami said during the event which took place in Abuja.

    According to the minister, the figure is an indication that the Federal Government has allocated a good amount of funds to the development of Nigeria’s oil-bearing region.

    He, however, expressed concern over uncompleted and some unverified projects in the Niger Delta despite the allocations.

    Malami’s remark comes almost two years after President Muhammadu Buhari ordered a forensic audit of the NDDC starting from 2001.

    Worried over alleged misappropriation in the Commission, Buhari insisted on knowing how funds budgeted to the region were spent.

    “With the amount of money that the Federal Government has religiously allocated to the NDDC, we will like to see the results on the ground; those that are responsible for that have to explain certain issues,” one of the presidential aide, Femi Adesina, had quoted his principal as saying during a meeting with governors from states which make up the Commission.

    “The projects said to have been done must be verifiable. You just cannot say you spent so much billions and when the place is visited, one cannot see the structures that have been done. The consultants must also prove that they are competent.”

    In August 2020, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) equally approved N722.3m for the audit, with the payment coming from the Presidency.

  • BREAKING: Buhari sends sackload of NDDC forensic audit report to Ministry of Justice

    BREAKING: Buhari sends sackload of NDDC forensic audit report to Ministry of Justice

    President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered that the sackload of the final report of the forensic audit carried out on the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) be sent to the Ministry of Justice.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Buhari gave the order on Thursday after receiving sackload of the final forensic audit report from the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Godswill Akpabio.

    The NDDC forensic audit report, the documents of which were conveyed in sacks, were received by the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, on behalf of the President.

    Read remarks by Malami at the presentation of the report below:

    I welcome you all to the presentation of the Report on the forensic audit of the Niger Delta Commission (NDDC), which report I am to receive on behalf of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR.

    2. You will recall the President had ordered for a holistic forensic audit of the activities of the Commission from inception to August 2019 in response to the yearnings of the people the Niger Delta Region to reposition it for effective service delivery. It is imperative to state that, the call for the audit by the people of the Niger Delta Region arose from the huge gaps between resources invested in the region vis a vis the huge gap in infrastructural, human and economic development.

    3. It is on record that between 2001 and 2019, the Federal Government has approved N3, 375, 735,776,794.93 Three Trillion, Three Hundred and Seventy Five Billion, Seven Hundred and Seventy Six Thousand, Seven Hundred and Ninety Four Naira, Ninety Three Kobo as budgetary allocation and N2,420,948,894,191.00 Two Trillion, Four Hundred and Twenty Billion, Nine Hundred and Forty Million, and, Eight Hundred and Ninety Four Thousand, One Hundred and Ninety One Naira as Income from Statutory and Non Statutory Sources, which brings the total figure to the sum of approximately Six Trillion Naira given to the Niger Delta Development Commission.

    4. Consequently, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approved the engagement of a Lead Forensic Auditor, as well as 16 reputable Audit Firms to conduct the audit exercise.

    5. The President is delighted that the auditors have now completed this exercise and the Report is today being presented.

    6. Furthermore, the President is not oblivious of the interest generated by Stakeholders towards the forensic audit exercise and the agitation for the constitution of the Board of the NDDC. However, this Administration is determined to address challenges militating against the delivery of the mandate of the NDDC to the people of the Niger Delta Region.

    7. It is in the broader context of the foregoing developments that the President recently signed into Law the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) which has been a contentious issue over the years for successive Governments, to bring about the prudence and accountability in the Petroleum Sector and to give a sense of participation and ownership to the Host communities.

    8. The Report on the forensic audit of the NNDC and your recommendations will therefore be critically analysed for necessary action and implementation. We owe it a duty to the people of the Niger Delta Region to improve their standard of living through the provision of adequate infrastructural and socio-economic development.

    9. The welfare and socio- economic inclusion of the Niger Delta Region is paramount to the development and security of the Region and by extension the Country. Funds spent on development activities should as a consequence promote political and socio-economic stability in the Region. Citizens affected by these development projects should also exhibit the ability to contribute to the continuous progress of their immediate and wider communities by engaging in constructive activities that will sustain and supports these development projects.

    10. It is evident that considerable resources have been channeled by the Federal Government to the development of the Niger Delta from 2001 to 2019. It is therefore important for the Federal Government and the public to be properly informed of what has been spent and how that has been spent. The essence of the forensic audit is to ensure probity and accountability in the use of public funds. It is against this background that the Federal Government will without hesitation strategically implement all aspects of the audit exercise that will promote probity and greater prosperity for the Niger Delta Region and Nigeria as whole.

    11. The Federal Government is particularly concerned with the colossal loss occasioned by uncompleted and unverified development projects in the Niger Delta Region, in spite of the huge resources made available to uplift the living standard of the citizens. We have on record over 13,777 projects, the execution of which is substantially compromised. The Federal Government is also concerned with the multitudes of Niger Delta Development Commission’s bank accounts amounting to 362 and lack of proper reconciliation of accounts.

    12. The Federal Government will in consequence apply the law to remedy the deficiencies outlined in the audit report as appropriate. This will include but not limited to initiation of criminal investigations, prosecution, recovery of funds not properly utilized for the public purposes for which they were meant for review of the laws to reposition and restructure the NDDC for the efficiency of better service delivery amongst others. In all these instances of actions, legal due processes will strictly be complied with.

    13. The President has directed that the forensic audit report be forwarded to the Federal Ministry of Justice for a legal review and relevant Ministries, Departments and Agencies of Government will be engaged in doing justice to the findings accordingly.

    14. I appreciate the Honourable Minister, Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs, Sen. (Dr.) Godswill Akpabio, his colleague Sen. Omotayo Alasoadura, the Interim Administrator, Management and Staff of the NNDC for their support towards the completion of the audit exercise.

    15. My appreciation also goes to the Lead Forensic Auditors and the 16 Field Audit Firms for completing this exercise, as well as the Security Committee for securing the lives and properties of the Audit Firms throughout the duration of the forensic audit exercise.

    16. Thank you and God bless Nigeria.

  • BREAKING: Akpabio submits NDDC forensic audit report to Buhari in sacks

    BREAKING: Akpabio submits NDDC forensic audit report to Buhari in sacks

    Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Godswill Akpabio has submitted the final report of the forensic audit of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to President Muhamamadu Buhari.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Akpabio submitted the NDDC forensic audit report to Buhari in sacks.

    The documents conveyed in sacks were received by the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, who represented the President.

    In his remarks shortly before handing over the report, Akpabio, disclosed that the forensic audit covered a total of 13,777 contracts awarded from 2001 to 2019 at a final contract value of N3,274,206,032,213.24.

     

    Details shortly…

  • Corruption: Pressure mounts on Buhari to act on NDDC forensic audit report

    Corruption: Pressure mounts on Buhari to act on NDDC forensic audit report

    Pressure is currently mounting on President Muhammadu Buhari to take action on the forensic audit carried out on the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    This is even as the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development (PRIMORG) has called on the President to act on the matter.

    PRIMORG urged President Buhari to expeditiously take action against the staff of NDDC and contractors found culpable in the brazen criminality, contract scams, and embezzlement of the Commission since its establishment in 2000.

    The admonition is coming on the heels of the expose by the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Godswill Akpabio, which says that the recently submitted final forensic audit report of the NDDC had 12,128 abandoned projects that could not be traced to any contractor.

    President Buhari had in October 2019 ordered for forensic auditing of the Commission after pressures from governors from the Niger Delta region, civil society organizations, and Nigerians over the endemic corruption in the agency.

    Programme Coordinator at Social Development Integrated Center, Isaac Botti led the call during an anti-corruption radio program, PUBLIC CONSCIENCE on RADIO, produced by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development, PRIMORG, on Wednesday in Abuja.

    Botti who lamented the culture of overlooking audit and corruption reports in Nigeria said President Buhari must address the gaps in the forensic audit report of the NDDC objectively and without bias, noting that the “NDDC forensic audit will not achieve anything if there is no political will to implement it”.

    “With regards to the NDDC forensic audit report, President Buhari should show the public he meant business, he should make the report available to the public, he should ensure that proper and right actions are followed and that will instill confidence in the public and show that he is ready to fight corruption.

    “If the President says he is fighting corruption, then let him fight it without bias and objectively which include doing everything that will help control the incidences of corruption and supporting every process that curbs corruption,” Botti stressed.

    He added that the two decades of mismanagement and embezzlement of funds meant to develop the region have been made possible due to corruption and failure to institute governing board of the NDDC; which plays a significant role in overseeing the operation of the commission.

    On his part, the Regional Editor of The News Guru Newspapers, Emmanuel Ovuakporie expressed discontent with the audit report and the auditors, while calling on President Buhari to create special courts that will swiftly tackle corruption in Nigeria.

    Ovuakporie said since the audit report on the president’s table is from the inception of the Commission every person who headed the commission in the past should be questioned, insisting that a special court to try corruption cases will ensure faster results.

    His words: “We need special courts to try corrupt politicians, if we have such courts, these people (corrupt Nigerians) will change their mindset. If you have a special court dedicated especially to try corrupt officers within a short period there will be swift judgment and people will know that there are courts that can take care of their issues without wasting time.

    “The forensic report covers from 2000 to 2020 which is exactly 20 years, so it means virtually everybody that has managed the commission from the beginning to date should be investigated. If Buhari wants to let us know that he is fighting corruption he should set up special courts to try corrupt officers,” Ovuakporie stated.

    He assured that The News Guru Newspapers will go the extra mile to inform the public of what is actually happening in the NDDC despite the difficulties associated with accessing information in government agencies.

    A Nigerian, identified as Joseph who called into the radio programme also had these to say: “The youth of the Niger Delta region should mobilize themselves, every youth should insist that this report be made known; Let us know who are doing these things, the best way to tackle the corruption is to know who are the enemies of the Niger Delta.”

    Public Conscience is a syndicated weekly anti-corruption radio program used by PRIMORG to draw government and citizens’ attention to corruption and integrity issues in Nigeria.

    The program is supported by the MacArthur Foundation.

  • IOCs owing NDDC $4bn – Minister

    IOCs owing NDDC $4bn – Minister

    Senator Godswill Akpabio says oil firms operating in the Niger Delta have defaulted in their statutory remittances to the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to the tune of $4 billion.

    Akpabio, who is the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, made the claim on Thursday at the weekly ministerial briefing held at the State House in Abuja.

    He noted that oil firms operating in the area are expected to provide three percent of their annual budgets to the commission, but none has complied with this.

    Akpabio stressed that the Ministry of Niger Delta will take a keen interest in the implementation of the three percent Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) compensation to host communities.

    The former Akwa Ibom governor also stated that the NDDC owes contractors ₦3 trillion. He, however, explained that not all awarded contracts with costs can be regarded as debt.

    On the progress made so far in the Commission, the Niger Delta minister disclosed that about 109 projects – which would be commissioned soon – have been implemented in the South-South.

    Funds from the Niger Delta Ministry – which was established in 2008 with a hundred ₦200 billion – shrank to ₦19 billion in 2020 and then rose slightly to ₦24 billion in 2021.

    The minister revealed that ₦10 billion – out of the allocated fund – has been dedicated to fix the East-West Road.