Academics from the Niger Delta region on Wednesday
challenged leaders from the area to look inwards in tackling the developmental
challenges facing the area.
The Dons spoke as discussants at a colloquium to kick off
burial rites for Pastor P.Z. Aginighan, former Managing Director of Niger Delta
Development Commission (NDDC).
The colloquium coincides with the 60th post hummus
birthday of Pastor Power Ziakede Aginighan, fondly called P.Z. Aginighan who
died at 59 in an auto crash at the Mbiama section of East-West road on Sept.1,
2018.
The former NDDC boss, had lost his life along with his
son and Police orderly.
Prof Samuel Ibaba, lead presenter at the colloquium titled
“The Niger Delta Development Challenge and Institutional Responsibilities: The
Way Forward noted that the region had complained enough of neglect.
Ibaba, Dean Faculty of Social Sciences, Niger Delta
University, Wilberforce Island, Amasoma Bayelsa called on the people to shift
their attention from external forces working against the region and look
inwards to find solutions.
He said that the narrative of deprivation has been over emphasized,
with the intervention agencies performing below expectations urging the people
to work to enhance the competitiveness of the region.
“The old narrative of unfairness by the Nigerian
government that exonerates us and shifting blames to other quarters than us has
to be reviewed; in all honesty the old narrative has been over emphasized.
“Since the Willings Commission recommended the
establishment of a development Commission to focus of Niger Delta a lot of
things has happened, we need to review how we have performed and ask questions.
“There is empirical evidence that we are ethic in our
approach, whenever the Managing Director of NDDC shifts to a particular state
in the region, the states gets the lion share of the projects.
“It is also clear that the oil bearing communities for
who the derivation revenue accrues are often neglected, we should give
ourselves the fairness we demand from the Nigerian federation” Ibaba said.
In his discussion, Prof Godwin Darah, of Faculty of Arts,
University of Africa, Toru Orua, Bayelsa urged other Niger Delta Governors to
join Gov Seriake Dickson in the advocacy for restructuring.
He said that the region should intensify efforts on the
struggle for resource control for greater share of the oil resource for the
development of the region.
“If we have faired this far with 13 percent derivation,
imaging what full resource control of 100 per cent can do, 13 per cent
derivation is 87 percent deprivation,” Darah said.
In his on discussion, Mr Atei Beredugo, a former employee at NDDC regretted
that despite incremental increase in funds accruing to the NDDC, development in
the region was not commensurate with the inflow of funds.
“At the year 2000, total fund to the Niger Delta region
stood at about N200 million, but as at
2013 it is about N1.8 trn but despite the increased income, can we say that
development is commensurate with what came in ?
“The NDDC annual budget is in excess of N300 bn and the
Commision has been there for 18 years and if you compare Delta and Anambra
states, will there be any difference between an oil derivation state and that
without ?” Beredugo said.
He traced the problem of the region to public servants who
owe allegiance to no one adding that if the electoral process was reformed, it
would return power to the people.
Earlier, Chairman of P.Z. Aginighan’s burial Committee Chief
Ayakeme Whiskey said that the colloquium would be held annually to immortalize
the late Ijaw leader.
Also Ambassador Godknows Igali who extolled Aginighan
said that late leader epitomized the Niger Delta struggle and rose from an
employee in the NDDC to become an Executive Director and later Acting Managing
Director.
“P.Z. Aginighan was brilliant and with a deep
spirituality and was gifted with leadership from the early stages of his
leadership,” Igali said.
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