The Presidency at the
weekend relieved Dr. Henry Ogiri, Executive Director Finance, and Tuoyo
Omatsuli, Executive Director Projects of the Niger Delta Development Commission
NDDC of their appointments, paving the way for the newly-appointed Sole
Administrator/Acting Managing Director, Mrs Ibim Semenitari, to run the agency
alone in the interim.
The unceremonious removal
of the two men, who were seen as in-dispensible following their retention when
the Managing Director, Mr Bassey Dan-Abia, was removed two weeks ago, completes
the sack of the board, which was empanelled by President Goodluck Jonathan in
December 2013.
The Secretary to the
Government of the Federation, Babachir David Lawal, whose office supervises the
commission, confirmed in a telephone chat said that the Federal Government
would beam its searchlight on the activities of the commission in its bid to
make it serve the needs of the region better.
Describing the NDDC as
being in bad shape, Lawal, lamented that the debt profile of the agency, which
had not done much to transform the Niger Delta since its inception, had risen
to N300 billion due to many contracts yet to be completed in most cases.
Lawal regretted that the
organisation had lost its focus of serving primarily as a strategic development
vehicle and served more as a political organisation, thereby denying the people
of the area the real benefits for which it was set up.
The SGF said: “We have to
reorganise the NDDC to serve as a strategic development organisation to be able
to address the peculiar needs of the region and its people.
“As part of the
re-organisation, we are going to beam our searchlight on the commission’s
activities and see how best to reposition the agency for better performance. We
will do whatever is necessary to put the NDDC in a better shape for the overall
development of the area.
“I can tell you that the
Federal Government is very sympathetic to the Niger Delta because of its
peculiar terrain and we need to take urgent steps to put things right in the
place,” the SGF said.
On why it took some time
before the NDDC management was sacked, the SFG explained that the government
needed to study the situation in the commission before wielding its axe against
the officials.
“We needed to study the
place before taking action,” he said.
On the complaints by some
of the nine states that they had been marginalised by the sacking of their
natives on the board and the appointment of a sole administrator, the SGF said
the action was a temporary one and assured that none of the states would be short-changed.
Lawal said: “I want to
assure all the nine states that nobody will be short-changed in the composition
of the board and management of the NDDC. The right thing will be done by
putting the right people in place in accordance with the Act setting up the
commission.

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