Akpabio stated this at the weekly media briefing for State
House correspondents, organised by the Presidential Media Team led by Mr Femi
Adesina, the President’s spokesman at the presidential Villa, Abuja.
The NDDC, a commission under the ministry, is currently
undergoing forensic audit as part of deliberate efforts to ensure speedy
development of the Niger Delta region.
According to the minister, the indebtedness covered several
years of unpaid commitments of the three per cent each IOC was mandated to
remit to the intervention agency from their annual budgets.
He said that the unpaid funds were part of monies NDDC was
expected to expend on development projects in the oil producing region of the
country, assuring that government would do whatever possible, to recover the
funds from the oil companies.
“NDDC is being owed over $4billion by the IOCs and the
Federal Government is making every effort to collect the money.
“They were expected to pay three per cent of their annual
budgets to the NDDC, all of them are owing the NDDC.
“The federal government owes a little bit on its own part
that it should pay the NDDC. I believe that with the audit of the commission,
we will begin to offset those things, working closely with the Ministry of
Finance.
“There are plans to pay those debts. I want to see a balance
sheet of the NDDC that is bankable.
“The IOCs are expected to pay to the NDDC three percent of
their annual budgets. All of them have failed to do so at different times,” he
said.
Akpabio also disclosed that the NDDC was owing contractors
about N3 trillion, through frivolous awards, many of which had remained
unverified.
“We are investigating the NDDC through the forensic audit.
Since my assumption of office, l have checked and have not seen even a 5km road
done by the NDDC.
“We are still searching to understand where the funds they
spent went, and we are going to find them”, he added.
On the Ogoni clean-up, the minister disclosed that 21 sites
had so far been completed, while new contracts would soon be awarded for 36 new
sites.
Akpabio, who also reacted to the three per cent dedicated to
the host communities under the recently signed Petroleum Industry Act,
solicited that the ministry be allowed to manage the funds, assuring that it
would protect the interests of all the affected host communities.
“The problem of the host community fund is not the
percentage neither is it the problem of money.
“The Petroleum Industry Act, when implemented, is going to
assuage the feelings of the people of the host communities, because they never
had half a percent since oil was discovered in 1956 in Oloibiri.
“That is why I said that it is not the percentage that is
the issue. Some communities could not even do this solar powered toilet, some have
no drinking water, even water tankers supplying them water failed, because they
had oil exploration and exploitation had destroyed their water system.
“But, now with the PIA, they will be able to do certain
things for themselves without waiting on oil companies, the federal government
or the state, to do it for them,’’ he added.
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