By Olatunji Kehinde
The Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, has warned contractors working for it to brace up and discharge their obligations fully as the Commission will no longer pay for jobs that are not verified and certified.
The warning came from the NDDC Acting Managing Director, Gbene Dr Joi Nunieh, while inspecting projects, which included the multi-billion erosion control project in Bende Local Government Area of Abia State; erosion control, solar water and a health centre.
The
inspection team, led by the NDDC Chief Executive Officer, included the
representative of Bende Federal Constituency and member of the House Committee
on NDDC, Hon Okezie Kalu; the NDDC Acting Executive Director, Finance and
Administration, Chief Ibanga Bassey Etang and other directors of the
Commission.
Nunieh
stressed the need to intensify the efforts of the Commission with respect to
supervision and inspection to facilitate the speedy completion of on-going
projects in the nine states covered by the NDDC.
She noted
that the inspection was necessary to ensure that development projects in rural
communities were properly executed for the benefit of the people, warning that
unnecessary delays would not be tolerated.
Inspecting
the erosion control works at Bende Road in Umuahia, Nunieh expressed
displeasure over the slow pace of work on the project and ordered that the NDDC
consultant be relieved of his duties for not being firm in dealing with the
contractor.
A project
brief of the erosion control, awarded in 2012, showed that it would provide
massive retaining walls of 4.5 metres and 7.5 metres, spanning 200 metres.
According to the scope, it would involve earth filling of about 160,000 metres.
It further
showed that the project would provide reinforced concrete works, including
drains, culverts and catch pits. It also includes stone pitching of the erosion
site to an accessible gradient. Furthermore, the erosion works would be
complemented by the reconstruction of the 1-kilometre adjoining road.
The NDDC team also inspected the Isieke-Ajatah Road being threatened by erosion in Umuahia North Local Government Area, where Nunieh said she was worried that the project appeared to have been abandoned.
At the
Etiti-Ulo Road, the NDDC boss expressed shock that what she described as a
“very deplorable” road was recorded as completed, when it may not have been
done at all. She said that from what she had seen, she decided that the NDDC
would no longer clear jobs for payment unless they were inspected.
She
observed: “Too many people are asking us to pay for uncompleted projects. Going
forward, we must visit project sites to see things for ourselves. We are not
going to sit in the office to approve payments for jobs we cannot attest to.”
Other projects inspected by the NDDC team were the completed solar water project at Ndiwo Itumbauza in Bende, which was not functional and a similar one at Etiti Ulo, as well as a health centre in Nkalakwu.
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The NDDC
boss decried the poor state of the health facility and charged the Commission’s
Directorate for Health and Social Services to take measures to re-activate the
health centre, insisting that all abandoned projects would be revamped and
completed.
Indigenes of
the communities benefiting from the projects trouped out in their numbers to
receive the NDDC team. They displayed placards indicating their appreciation of
the efforts of the NDDC Interim Management in ensuring that rural communities
were positively impacted.
The
President General of Bende Development Union, Mr Anthony Njoku, said his people
were full of gratitude for the various projects being executed by NDDC in their
area.