The federal government has approved the sum of N100 billion for
the completion of Sections 1 to 4 of the East-West road project in the Niger Delta
region.
The Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Usani Uguru Usani, made
the disclosure in Abuja at a meeting with the Host Communities of Nigeria
Producing Oil and Gas (HOSTCOM), led by its National Chairman, Chief Style Benjamin Tamaranebi, on Tuesday.
At the meeting, HOSTCOM, the parent body of all oil and gas
producing, impacted, satellite communities in the Niger Delta region, appealed
to the federal government for the release of the lingering gas flare penalty
fund as discussed and approved by late President Musa Yar’Adua in 2009.
In 2018, findings from a Presidential Inter-Ministerial team
on assessment tour of Sections 1 to 4 of the East-West road from Warri, Delta
State to Oron, Akwa Ibom State indicated that contractors would require about
N100 billion to complete the four sections of the flagship project in the Niger
Delta region.
Usani told the HOSTCOM Representatives during the Abuja
meeting on Tuesday that the submission from the committee culminated in the
federal government's approval of the N100 billion.
China Export-Import Bank, the minister added, had also
agreed to support the construction of Section 5 of the road from Oron to
Calabar in the sum of $500 million, while the federal government pays
counterpart funding.
According to Usani, the federal government was on the verge
of awarding the contract with a new design.
The Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA), the
minister stressed, is to monitor the completion of Sections 1 to 4 of the road, adding that the Ministry of Niger Delta
Affairs had acquiesced to the directive of the presidency that the N100 billion
should be paid directly to the contractors from the Federation Account.
The minister revealed that the federal government had also
directed that the Gas Flare Penalty Fine being requested by the host
communities, be released to them.
Earlier, the Minister of State for Niger Delta Affairs,
Prof. Claudius Omoleye Daramola, decried a situation where contracts were
awarded to the indigenes of the Niger Delta region, who ended up abandoning the
projects after payments, warning that
decisive actions would be taken to address such misdeeds.
In his remarks, the National Chairman of HOSTCOM, Chief
Style Benjamin Tamaranebi, said their visit was to seek the federal
government’s collaboration through the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs, in a
bid to address the challenges of various communities in the Niger Delta region.
He lamented that oil exploration and exploitation
companies hide under obnoxious
government laws to neglect their host communities.
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