It was in the news that the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), recently presented a N1.91 trillion 2024 budget, to the Senate Committee on NDDC. The draft budget (as it then was) emphasized priorities such as; security, job creation, youth and women empowerment, social welfare, education, and infrastructure among others.
Without going into detailed analysis, one profound part of the approved budget is the decision of NDDC leadership to raise N1 trillion, from the development and commercial banks, for the completion of 1,006 legacy projects by previous leaderships spread across the region. These projects are reportedly in specific areas such as roads, bridges, electricity projects, school buildings, hospitals, shore protection and reclamation, among others.
Aside from the overt awareness that when abandoned projects are completed and put into use, it saves the nation from wastage, boost national assets and promotes socioeconomic development of the people, region and the nation in general, there are however, other covert reasons that renders this present development as both newsy and commendable.
Students of history who are familiar with the origin of project abandonment and neglect of national assets in Nigeria and the politics that kept it going will agree with this piece that NDDC governing board and management is on the path to ending an ugly ‘culture’ that has over the years held down the region’s development.
And if this policy framework is achieved as envisaged, it is abundantly clear to this piece that future historian and of course development professionals shall definitely refer to the present board and management as a bunch that restored new order in the region and hope to the people.
Beyond what future historians may say, there is equally need to highlight why this piece is fixated with NDDC’s departure from old order, and at the very moment on a mission to tackle a challenge that have not only become a culture of the sort but has its origin deeply rooted in history that predates the nation’s independence in October 1960.
Beginning with the historical undertone as to why Nigerians and successive leaderships in the country daily demonstrate lackadaisical attitude towards national asserts and see nothing wrong with project desertion, history has it that during colonial rule, Nigerians developed anti-colonial belief that public property is no man’s property.
This belief, according to reports, was intended to fight colonialism but it continued after independence and brought insensitivity to government property, ineptitude, nepotism, neglect of duty etc. it gravely offers explanation as to the reckless way in which government property and projects are handled.
Indeed, what the above information tells us is that both project abandonment and public asset neglect in the country are two striking human tragedies that the pain they inflict on the nation are deepened by the fact that they were avoidable.
With this point highlighted, this piece will morph to what NDDC’s present decision on previous projects portends and ingrained lessons therein for all to draw.
‘There are books to teach how to build a house, how to repair an engine and how to write a book, but there are no codified books on how to build a region, society or nation’. Conversely, Nation building in my views, depends on; one, ceaseless creative and far reaching public policies designed and implemented by well foresighted leaders- a case in point is the NDDC’s resolve to complete abandoned projects that presently litters its mandate states.
The second has to do with the humility of others who could neither design nor formulate to learn and domesticate within their jurisdiction such far reaching people oriented knowledge from their compatriots. These are the only possible explanations!
In this light, this piece believed and still believes that close ranking with a view to learning from NDDC’s latest template is not only important but eminently desirable as ‘we cannot continue to do one thing repeatedly and be expecting a different result-or tackling our societal challenges with the same mentality used when the problems were created’.
Viewed broadly, the decision to revitalize the previously initiated projects by the agency without minding the administration that initiated such projects strategically raises the consciousness that leadership is globally considered as continuum.
It also stands as a testament of promise fulfilled on the part of the entire governing board and management of NDDC. Recall that Mr. Chiedu Ebie, Chairman, Governing board of NDDC, while giving opening remark at the agency’s 2024 retreat held in February, at Ikot Ekpene, Akwa Ibom state, told the gathering that NDDC board and management under his leadership will look back, so as to productively look forward in its resolve to provide coordinated development to the people of Niger Delta region.
To take one example of why NDDC’s living up to their promise is considered commendable, this recent development (completing previous projects), has begun to create hope among many of its multiple stakeholders; presently, many have interesting things to say about the agency and its new leadership. And those comments gladly promote the organization’s corporate image and perception.
Beside these torrent of positive comments, what is most significant about the whole episode is that the positive actions of the current leadership tactically affirms as true the age long dictum which insists that ‘it takes good people and the society for a government to do well’.
Another takeaway is; with the agency’s present shift from old to new order, coupled with her well-crafted projects and initiatives such as; building partnership for renewed hope, lightening up the Niger Delta and Carbon emission reduction among others, there is no doubt anymore, that infrastructural provision, economic and social programmes, and prosperity of the people are not natural order of things but depends on the ceaseless efforts and attentions from an honest and effective government that the people elect/appoint.
Therefore, while it is obvious, going by commentaries that NDDC has finally gotten a board with the understanding that it is their duty to serve and save the region, one important point that we must not allow go with political winds is that it remains our collective responsibility to protect public/national assets and this, role we shall perform at the most fundamental levels.
Accordingly too, it is the responsibility of those in the position of authority to unlearn the habit of abandoning projects –especially projects inherited from their predecessors. And, like NDDC board and management, imbibe the culture of project completion without considering under whose administration such project was conceived or initiated.