Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba, SAN, ex-Chairman of Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, has advised the current Chairman, Mrs. Lauretta Onochie of the commission, to be guided by the provisions of the Act establishing the commission.
Ndoma-Egba, who spoke in an interview, said that the law establishing the NDDC provides for the powers of the Board and that of Management.
He said although the overall powers of managing the commission resides with the board to provide the policy direction, the management has the responsibility for the implementation of the policies.
According to him: “Ordinarily, there shouldn’t be a problem because the powers are clearly defined. But you see, where the problem comes is on the issue of control of funds. That is where the issue comes in because the various laws; Fiscal Responsibility Act, and even the NDDC Act, makes the Chief Executive Officer the accounting officer, and in some cases, liability for infractions of those laws are personal to the Chief Executive.”
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Ndoma-Egba said that the Chief Executive Officer could not spend outside the budget, which must be approved by the board.
“So, all you need do is to exercise the powers that have been given to you in a very creative way that will check the board without necessarily impeding the running of the Commission.
“The chairman is not an executive chairman; so, you cannot say as chairman, I have decreed A, B, C or D. You need the approval of the Board. So, I think that what is causing the confusion is a misapprehension of the law establishing the NDDC. Either a misapprehension or it hasn’t been properly read.
“The law does not have any powers attributed to the chairman. The powers of the chairman are the powers of the board and when we started, the first thing the board did was to donate their powers to me as chairman, to act in urgent cases. But you always come back to the board for them to ratify what you had done.
‘‘So as chairman, you don’t have any special powers. The powers of the chairman are coterminous with the powers of the board.
‘‘It is the Managing Director that for instance, is named as the chief accounting officer and by virtue of the extant laws, he is personally liable for the infraction of those laws.”
He regretted that the NDDC had not been allowed to grow, thus denying it of an established tradition.
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“By now, apart from the law, we should have had an established tradition, because NDDC was established in the year 2000, that is long enough for certain things to be the tradition. But there is no board of NDDC that has survived its full term. So those traditions haven’t been established, and then there is too much outside interference.”
He recalled that in 2006, the then President Olusegun Obasanjo launched an elaborate regional development Master Plan, generated by Niger Delta stakeholders, state governments, oil companies, development partners and oil-producing communities.
He lamented that the plan, envisaged to last for 15 years was abandoned, leaving the region without a road map.
He wondered how the entire Niger Delta region could be developed without a plan.
‘‘The starting point was to either revalidate the initial master plan which had a 15-year life span and had expired, or get a new master plan. So, we were in the process of developing that master plan.
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‘‘We were already talking with the government of Sao Tome, for them to deploy their excess internet capacity to Niger Delta region because all the trunks that are coming from America and Europe meet in Sao Tome before they are distributed to different parts of Africa.
“Sao Tome, is an Island nation, with about 200,000 people, but the capacity they have is far more than what we have in Nigeria with 220 million people. So, we were in talks with them, in fact, they were willing to even give us their excess capacity plus their telecommunication companies. But it was at that point that the board was abruptly dissolved. We had already gotten approval in principle.”
He said that the NDDC Board under his leadership recognised the fact that “oil is a finite resource and it is a question of time before funding becomes an issue. So, we decided not to depend on oil anymore.”