NDDC Board: Senate Screened me for Four-Year Tenure - Ogbuku
The Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, Dr. Samuel Ogbuku, has provided clarity on the issue of the tenure of the current Governing Board of the Commission, stating that the members were appointed for a four-year tenure.
Addressing a Press Conference at
the NDDC headquarters in Port Harcourt, Ogbuku said the insinuations in some
quarters that his tenure as the Managing Director would end this year, was
false and without any foundation.
He stated that subject to the provision of section 4 of the NDDC
Establishment Act, “a member of the board other than ex-efficio member, shall
hold office for a term of four years at the first instance and may be
reappointed for a further term of four years and no more.”
Ogbuku said that those pushing for the truncation of
the tenure of the NDDC Board were not happy that members were working harmoniously
to deliver on the mandate of president
Bola Ahmed Tinubu for the people of the Niger Delta region.
The NDDC Chief Executive Officer ;lamented that in spite of the efforts of the
NDDC Board and management to deliver on quality projects and programmes, some
people with selfish motives were working behind the scene to return the
commission to the days of instability and non-performance.
He stated that nothing would distract the NDDC Board and Management
from holding fast to its mantra of Transiting from Transactions to
Transformation.
Ogbuku advised those scheming for a change of batons at NDDC to hold their
horses as President Tinubu re-appointed him for another term of four years,
noting that the region should be ready to see more people-oriented projects and
programmes.
He assured that as soon as the 2024 budget of the Commission was signed into
law, the on-going efforts to complete legacy projects would gain momentum,
pointing out that the plan in the budget was to raise N1 trillion from
development and commercial banks for the completion of legacy projects spread
across the Niger Delta region.
Ogbuku
explained that the legacy projects included regional roads, bridges,
electricity projects, school buildings, hospitals, shore reclamation and
protection, among others.
He also outlined recent initiatives of the Board,
including the Niger Delta Stakeholders’ Summit, which was a culmination of
other engagements with the youth groups and women. He assured that the
resolutions of the summit would inform future actions, stating that the
communique would be presented to President Tinubu.
Speaking on the NDDC Healthcare
Programme, which caters to the needs of rural communities, Ogbuku said that the
recent free medical outreach across the nine states of the region, was
successful, leading to plans for holding the event biannually.
He said further that the Commission
had acquired and distributed 13 ambulances to regional hospitals in response to
a cholera outbreak and was working to secure more ambulances and cholera
vaccines to prevent further incidents.
In the education sector, the NDDC
boss highlighted the Foreign Post-Graduate Scholarship Programme of the
Commission, noting that 2,323 students in the region had so far benefited from
it. He added: “We have released the initial funds for beneficiaries of the
2024/2025 scholarship programme. In response to the rising costs of foreign
education, we are considering offering local undergraduate scholarships.”
The NDDC boss assured that the era of not having data or
evidence of projects and programmes was gone, adding the current Board and
Management of the Commission had adopted strategies to showcase its activities.
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