Following the alleged illegal extension of the
tenure of the current board of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC),
the president was on Wednesday dragged before the Federal High Court Abuja by seven
Nigerian citizens from four states of the Niger Delta.
These Nigerians said they are seeking a clear
interpretation of the NDDC Act as it relates to tenure and rotation.
The present board of the commission is led by
Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba (Chairman) and Nsima Ekere (Managing Director/Chief
Executive Officer).
In their suit filed on December 15, 2017, via an originating
summons, the plaintiffs who also dragged the NDDC and the Minister of the Niger
Delta Affairs to court, posed the following questions among others for
determination:
“Whether the Niger Delta Development Commission
Act, 2000, is binding on all the defendants? Whether the defendants can be in
line with the NDDC Act, 2000, appoint/reappoint the managing director (of the commission)
whose letter of appointment is only for a one-year term which will terminate in
December 2017 or elongate the tenure outside the provision of Section 3 of the
NDDC Act, 2000.”
The plaintiffs, Micah Akeems (Bayelsa); Ziprebo
Emomotimi (Bayelsa); George Ufot Udoyara (Akwa Ibom); Elliot Tibakeni
(Bayelsa); Unyeowaji Patterson Gabriel (Rivers); Patrick Stephen (Abia); and
Alphonsus James (Bayelsa), specifically seek the following reliefs among others
from the court: an order of court to halt any attempt to retain the managing director
and other members of the commission; an order of court compelling the president
to appoint the managing director of the NDDC from Bayelsa State in accordance
with Section 12 (1) of the NDDC Act, 2000, which supports the principle of
rotation of key offices of the commission.
The plaintiffs said: “It will be a mockery of the
NDDC Act to disregard the said Act and not to follow the rotational principle
as envisaged and contemplated in the intent and spirit of the said Act.”
In an affidavit in support of the originating summons,
the first applicant, Micah Akeems, stated that since the establishment of the
NDDC, the appointment/reappointment of managing directors had been on the
principle of rotation.
He added that the tenure of the immediate outgoing
or out-gone managing director of the NDDC ended in December 2017 in accordance
with his letter of appointment.
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