Experts on Friday called for the prosecution of those involved in corruption and financial mismanagement within the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).
Their call follows the launch of a report on the agency by the Premium Times Centre for Investigative Journalism (PTCIJ) at a webinar on Friday.
The PTCIJ through its Natural Resources and Extractives Programme launched a series of investigations into the activities of NDDC in 2019.
The investigations and other reports, many published by PREMIUM TIMES, revealed how the abandonment of projects, poor maintenance, diversion of money, among other shady acts, characterised the activities of the NDDC in the Niger-Delta region.
As a follow-up to these investigations and to also drive reform within the NDDC, PTCIJ launched a 70-page report.
The report highlights the patterns and trends of mismanagement of funds by NDDC and its impact in the Niger-Delta region. It also provides policy recommendations which are important to reform NDDC and make it fulfil its purpose.
Speaking during the launch of the report, Dayo Olaide, the Deputy Director of MacArthur Foundation, lauded the work of PTCIJ as a trailblazer in its role of using investigative journalism to strengthen citizens’ voice by exposing corruption and influencing public discourse.
“If we don’t have strong media that are speaking out, we are in trouble,” he added.
Report, recommendations
Speaking on the report, Tobi Oluwatola, who is a policy analyst and country director, Solar FTP Nigeria, who served as the lead consultant on the research, said the team conducted field and desktop research to come up with the findings in the report.
“We tracked a sample of 172 NDDC projects, 22% were not funded, 23% were abandoned, 12% uncompleted and 43% completed.”
He also highlighted the problems identified with NDDC.
READ ALSO: Journalists, scholars brainstorm on practice of investigative journalism in Africa
Among them are, the award of contracts to unqualified companies; conflict of interest in the award of contracts; re-awarding of “completed” projects; false reporting of project status; failure to deliver on contracts; delay in paying contractors leading to project cost overruns and abandonment; poor quality and maintenance of completed projects; poor alignment of projects with actual needs of communities and state governments, among others.
In order to ensure transparency and efficacy of the NDDC, PTCIJ also provided some recommendations.
One of the recommendations is that the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) should intensify efforts to make its company register open, comprehensive and linked to the beneficial ownership details of all registered companies in Nigeria.
Another one is that the CAC should enable a functional search or open API requests to allow easy access to information for citizens and stakeholders.
Calls for prosecution
Different experts condemned this huge financial mismanagement in the NDDC and called for the prosecution of those found culpable of the corrupt acts.
They also condemned “the silence of ICPC and EFCC over the matter”.
During the panel discussion on the NDDC Probe, Vivian Bellonwu, Head of National Advocacy Centre for Social Action, expressed disappointment over the silence of the anti-corruption agencies in the country.
“We are actually disappointed by the silence of the ICPC and EFCC in this matter concerning the NDDC in the Niger Delta,” she said.
“We have to prosecute and get the money back from a lot of the people who have reallocated funds meant for the public in NDDC,” said another participant, Tobi Oluwatola.
Another, Dayo Olaide said, “the NDDC issue is a classic illustration of the resource curse which can only be solved by strengthening accountability. Corruption thrives on institutional failure.”
In their recommendations, PTCIJ also said anti-corruption agencies should work with the media and civil society organisations to prosecute and, if possible, recover contract funds from identified defaulting NDDC contractors.
Way Forward
Speaking on the way forward, Joshua Olufemi, the founder of Dataphyte, emphasised the need to harmonise and integrate the different kinds of data that are available “so that they can provide a more robust picture that can be used to draw intelligence and make the right decisions.”
“Data is the oil for the machine of transparency and accountability and decision making as a whole,” he said.
Henry Nwawuba, the deputy chairman of the House Committee on Niger-Delta Affairs, also spoke on the need for adequate communication between government agencies so as to avoid needless duplication of projects.
He said the legislative house must also evolve strategies to ensure that conversations “such as this are not just forgotten shortly after they are brought up”.
Seun Onigbinde, the Director of BudgIT Foundation, said the Nigerian procurement needs an entire overhaul to allow more startups and SMEs participate.
In his closing remarks, Dapo Olorunyomi, the Executive Director of PTCIJ, emphasised the importance of investigative journalism and accountability for strengthening democracy.
According to him, “this report on NDDC has illustrated that investigative journalism can be a mechanism to support governance.”
“Democracy will be meaningless if at the heart of it, accountability is missing,” he said.
Support PREMIUM TIMES' journalism of integrity and credibility
Good journalism costs a lot of money. Yet only good journalism can ensure the possibility of a good society, an accountable democracy, and a transparent government.
For continued free access to the best investigative journalism in the country we ask you to consider making a modest support to this noble endeavour.
By contributing to PREMIUM TIMES, you are helping to sustain a journalism of relevance and ensuring it remains free and available to all.
TEXT AD: Call Willie - +2348098788999