Mr Patrick Ifon, Member,
Representing Esit-Eket, Ibeno, Onna Federal Constituency in the House of
Representatives has blamed Nigeria’s developmental challenges on policy
inconsistency.
Ifon
disclosed this during an interaction with reporters on Sunday in Yenagoa.
He
said policy summersaults was the bane of Nigeria’s underdevelopment adding that
the country had remained underdeveloped despite its huge human and natural
resources.
Ifon
said policy inconsistency had been a major challenge depriving Nigeria from
measuring up with countries like Brazil, South Korea, Singapore and Malaysia in
terms of technological and infrastructural development.
According
to him, Nigeria would have been a major exporter of rice with a robust food
security, supposing the agricultural Green Revolution Policy of Obasanjo’s
military regime was sustained.
He
said the failure of some past leaders to implement government policies had
resulted to lawlessness leading to abandoned projects across the nation.
The
representative condemned the habit of introducing new policies in every regime
adding that the practice was counterproductive in the long run.
“Government
is a continuum, both at State and Federal levels, long term policies of
government must be pursued and implemented by every successive administration,
to give room for continuity and development.
“Ajaokuta
Steel Complex, like other economically viable projects, are lying comatose
today because of our policy inconsistency, we hardly implement our long term
programs and policies.
“Each
President or Governor will come and start a new project without looking at the
viability of the ones started by their predecessor, even in NDDC and other
government agencies.
“It
leads to abandoned projects littered everywhere in the country, we cannot grow
as a nation with such level of inconsistencies,” he said.
The
lawmaker said he was currently, working on the Bill sponsored by his
predecessor, Mrs Owoidoho Ekpoattai for the establishment of a Federal College
of Education in Akwa Ibom as a demonstration of his belief in continuity.
He
said he was in consultation with the Akwa Ibom State Government to set up Oil
Mineral Area Development Commission with a view to address the developmental
needs of oil producing communities in the state.
Ifon
said the establishment of similar commission in Ondo, Delta, Imo, Edo, Abia and
other oil producing states had given the communities a sense of belonging.
He
said it had also engendered a peaceful operational environment for development
and economic growth
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