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NDDC Scholars Lament FG’s Neglect
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Some beneficiaries of the scholarship scheme put in place by the Federal Government through the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), have alleged that the commission has abandoned them.
In interviews with newsmen, the scholars who craved anonymity said they had been subjected to unfair and inhuman treatment by the commission since 2016.
The affected beneficiaries are Masters and PhD students of Niger Delta origin who won the scholarship awards in 2014 and 2015.
They alleged that their ordeals started when the leadership of the current NDDC board assumed office in November, 2016.
The beneficiaries were also carefully positioned to study courses considered to be of developmental benefit to the region; such as Engineering, Law, Environmental Sciences, Public Health, ICT, among others.
In January 2015, the NDDC advertised for scholarship vacancies in several national dailies and on its website.
Successful candidates were consequently issued award letters, a copy of which was made available to our source.
The value of the scholarship, according to the aggrieved scholars, was put at $30,000.
A successful scholar on arrival and registration at the foreign university was expected to ask the university to send an invoice for tuition fees to the NDDC via designated email addresses of officials in the education unit.
According to one of the scholars, “After settlement of tuition fees, the balance left (if any) out of the $30,000 was paid simultaneously to the scholar’s bank account in the local currency of the scholar’s country of study.
“A PhD scholarship is worth $30,000 per annum for three years making a total of $90,000, while a Masters scholarship is worth $30,000 for just one year.
“This has been the standard practice since the inception of the scholarship; albeit there are always delays as the NDDC has become very notorious for shabby treatment of her scholars among all national scholarship bodies,” the source said.
But some of the affected scholars, in email correspondence, said the last payments were made in March and August, 2016, under the interim management of Mrs Ibim Semenitari.
“Scholars were asked to provide invoices from their universities as far back as August, 2016, to prevent the usual delays,” they said in the correspondence.
“Sadly, payment was not effected until she was removed, and the substantive board led by its Chairman, Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba and Managing Director, Mr Nsima Ekere came on board in November, 2016. The scholarship funds have been set aside in the NDDC budget as stated in the 2015 and 2016 Appropriation Act.”
The aggrieved scholars, however, alleged that they have been labelled ‘ghost scholars’ and ‘PDP scholars.’
Investigations show that at some point in June, 2016, the beneficiaries wrote in a jointly signed petition, the Education Unit of the NDDC asked scholars to send in valid proof of current study status which most of them complied with.
“The MD has granted several press interviews alluding to the fact that he is investigating monumental corruption in the administration of the scholarship,” they wrote.
“Numerous committees have been set up and it seems that they have run out of excuses to pay us our monies. We wonder how long it takes to investigate cases of authentic scholars from fake ones in this time and age when any information is available at the click of an email,” they queried.
Our correspondent gathered that some of the PhD scholars have abandoned their programmes due to withdrawal of their student visas as a result of non-payment, while some of the Masters students who completed their studies without the scholarship payment have had their certificates withheld by the university.
The affected scholars also alleged that appeals made to the NDDC management, and the minister for Niger Delta Affairs have yielded no positive result as the respective foreign universities with students from the NDDC have made countless appeals for payment without success.
“Most times, they have had to fly in their representatives to NDDC Headquarters at Port Harcourt-Aba Road, Port Harcourt, in Rivers State, to personally beg for settlement because their emails and phone calls are shunned by the NDDC,” the scholars claimed in their petition.
One of the beneficiaries of the Masters scholarship scheme, Maryleen Ndubuaku, narrated her ordeal:”I am expected to graduate with excellent grades to help me actualise the goal of this scheme which is to contribute to building our great nation.
“This is really difficult considering that I have to think of how to survive and pay my bills; the thought of which constantly distracts my focus from my daily academic duties,” the M.Sc. student of Embedded Microelectronics and Wireless Systems, at the Coventry University, United Kingdom said.
But when contacted, Special Assistant on Media to the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Ojifo-Raphael Undiandeye, debunked claims that the scholars had been abandoned.
“They wrote the honourable minister, he minuted on their letter and forwarded it to the MD of NDDC. At one other time, he (the minister) said he went to the NDDC commission itself in Port Harcourt and saw a list where the MD was making approvals for payment of scholars,” Undiandeye said.
“To the best of my knowledge, a good number of them have been paid but we are still surprised that some of them are still complaining that they have not been paid. The challenge we are having is that, the commission is saying some of them are not authentic scholars or that some of them actually transferred in the process of admission: that is to say, someone in the NDDC records, for instance, were given scholarship in, say, University of Port Harcourt in Rivers State and they are bringing the receipts of University of Ibadan, Oyo State.
“They may be authentic scholars, but because they changed schools (and courses) without due information or without due recognition of the commission, the commission is lost as to whether they are authentic scholars or not. But for those ones who did not tamper with their admission processes, they don’t have issues,” the minister’s aide said.
Commenting further, he said that the NDDC “feels that in this era of change, some people are defrauding the commission of funds.”
He, however, advised the affected scholars to table their concerns before the commission rather than resort to social media attacks.
“Rather than going to the social media to create the impression that the NDDC is corrupt and refusing to pay their fees, let them tackle the problems properly because the MD has said that those who the commission owed fees, he has paid.
“Definitely, there would be few skirmishes here and there; people who have not been paid as a result of one or two difficulties, their cases should actually be addressed, if they are attending the school approved by NDDC. That is not a serious issue,” he added.
When told that the scholars had alleged that they were authentic scholars genuinely certified by the NDDC, he attributed further skirmishes to gaps in communication.
“If that is true, then there is a breach of communication between the commission, the students and the universities, and that has to be reconciled,” he said.
“I can’t authoritatively say that they have made all outstanding payments. All I can authoritatively say is that the commission has started paying to a good number of them; that was because my principal said that he saw when the MD (of NDDC) brought a list to approve payment for a good number of them. Whether that was all of them, I do not know.
“Let them cool down and write in details what the challenge is because the truth is that, people are defrauding the NDDC and NDDC is trying to stop it. I hear someone said that the commission claimed that several people were laying claims to scholarship funds over scholarship awards they did not receive. And that’s why the commission is being very careful, especially in this era of change.”
On allegations that some of the scholars were being treated badly because they were beneficiaries of the scheme in the last administration, Undiandeye dismissed the claim as untrue.
“It has absolutely nothing to do with that. I think the major challenge is documentation skirmishes here and there, otherwise the commission in this era is responsible,” he explained.
Efforts to ascertain whether all outstanding payments being owed the scholars had been made by the NDDC were futile.
However, when contacted, one of the commission’s media officers, Dayo Ibitoye, declined to speak on telephone.
When probed further, he requested a text message.
Several days after the text messages were sent, he has not replied.
The Tide reports that the NDDC is an interventionist agency that was set up in 2000 by the Olusegun Obasanjo administration as a replacement to the defunct Oil Minerals Producing Areas Development Commission (OMPADEC).
The NDDC Act 2000 empowers the commission to receive statutory appropriation of three per cent from oil derivation revenues as special allocation in addition to 0ne per cent Ecological Fund from the nine states of Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Edo, Imo, Ondo and Rivers, to enable it improve the welfare of the people of the oil-rich Niger Delta region.
As part of its mandate, the NDDC scholarship scheme was set up to improve the manpower capacity of Niger Delta youth by sponsoring them for Masters and PhD programmes in universities abroad.
Susan Serekara-Nwikhana
News
Fubara Attends PDPGF Meeting In Asaba …..Back Court Verdict On National Secretary Position
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Rivers State Governor, Sir Siminalayi Fubara, last Friday, attended the Peoples Democratic Party Governors’ Forum (PDP-GF) meeting in Asaba, the Delta State capital.
The Rivers State Governor, who is the Vice Chairman of the PDP Governors’ Forum, attended the meeting, alongside 10 other Governors of the party’s controlled states across the six geopolitical zones of the country.
The first PDPGF meeting in 2025, was held at the Government House in Asaba, at the end of which a seven-point resolution was reached.
Reading the communique at the end of the meeting, the Chairman of the Forum, and Governor of Bauchi State, Senator Bala Mohammed urged the National Working Committee (NWC) to put every machinery in place to ensure a hitch-free NEC meeting on March 13, 2025.
The communique stated:
“The Forum, having examined all the notices required by law to be given to validly convoke NEC, advised NWC to reschedule NEC to the thirteenth (13Th) of March 2025.”
The Forum further noted the Court of Appeal judgment affirming Udeh Okoye as the National Secretary of the party, saying that as a party that believes in the rule of law, it will respect the position of the Appellate Court on the matter.
“The Forum noted with delight the ongoing efforts at resolving the crisis in the National Working Committee, NWC, on the position of the National Secretary, and has reaffirmed its support for the Court of Appeal judgment; consequently, the Forum advised the NWC to set up the machinery for the effective implementation of the court judgment.
“While commending the country’s valiant and patriotic Armed Forces and Security Agencies for maintaining the frontline in securing the country and the gains of our gallant personnel against bandits in parts of the country, the Forum viewed with deep concern, the resurgence of brazen non-state actors. It, therefore, calls for the strengthening of the nation’s security architecture.”
Governors in attendance include: H.E Senator Bala Abdulkadir Mohammed (Bauchi State); H.E Sir Siminalayi Fubara (Rivers State) – Vice Chairman; H.E Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori (Delta State) – Host; H.E Dr. Agbu Kefas (Taraba State); H.E Rt. Hon. Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri (Adamawa State); and H.E Dr. Dauda Lawal (Zamfara State).
Others are H.E Senator Ademola Adeleke (Osun State); H.E Senator Douye Diri (Bayelsa State); H.E Pastor Umo Eno Ph.D (Akwa Ibom State); H.E Dr. Peter Mbah (Enugu State); H.E Barr. Caleb Mutfwang (Plateau State);
and H.E Bayo Lawal (Deputy Governor, Oyo State), who represented Governor Seyi Makinde.
News
NGO Implants Free Pacemakers Into 22 Cardiac Patients In PH
A United States based Non Governmental Organisation, Cardiovascular Education Forum, in collaboration with the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH), has successfully implanted free pacemakers into 22 patients with different cardiac cases in Port Harcourt.
This is in a bid to save lives and encourage patients with low heartbeats to live longer.
The implantable device, which costs $20,000 each, was inserted free of charge on the selected patients.
Speaking during a Special Hospital Ground Rounds at the UPTH with its Theme, “Recent Advances in Cardiac Pacing,” a cardiac Physiologist, Dr Neil Grub, said the NGO was in Nigeria to improve training and learning on cardiac issues and help patients with cardiac problems.
Accompanied by a team of experts comprising a cardiologist and cardiac device implanter, Dr Jagdeep Siagh, and UPTH interventional cardiologist, Dr Edafe Emmanuel, Dr Grubb said pacemakers were inserted on patients with low heartbeats to boost their heart rates.
Earlier, the Chief Medical Director, UPTH, Prof Henry Arinze Ugboma, said each of the implantable devices cost over $20,000.
Ugboma, represented by the Chairman, Medical Advisory Committee, UPTH, Prof Datonye Alasia, said the partnership between UPTH and the foreign NGO was to build networks, and improve services in terms of healthcare delivery, training and learning.
According to him, there is now a ray of hope in terms of treatment of patients with cardiovascular cases in the hospital.
He said the UPTH started the collaboration with Cardiovascular Education Forum in 2018 to boost health, training and learning on cardiac health.
He assured that, “in coming years, the scale of our collaboration with the mission will be higher.”
Chinedu Wosu
News
FG Unveils National Broadband Alliance To Drive Internet Access
The Federal Government has unveiled the National Broadband Alliance, a new initiative aimed at transforming the nation’s digital infrastructure and boosting connectivity across the country.
The initiative was unveiled yesterday in Lagos by the Minister of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy, Bosun Tijani, who was represented by the Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission, Aminu Maida.
In his address, Tijani stated that NBAN would significantly enhance broadband penetration, which has grown from just six per cent in 2015 to approximately 42 per cent as of October 2024.
To support this agenda, he said the government was leveraging a Special Purpose Vehicle to deploy 90,000 km of fibre backbone across the nation, connecting underserved and rural communities to high-speed internet.
According to him, the initiative aligns with the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, which prioritises innovation, technology, and collaboration as key drivers of national prosperity.
Tijani stated that the expansion would not only improve access to reliable broadband but also empower Nigerians, particularly in rural areas.
“While the progress made in broadband penetration is commendable, we recognise that much more needs to be done to ensure every Nigerian can enjoy the benefits of reliable, high-speed internet,” Tijani said.
The minister also emphasised the importance of strategic partnerships with donors, investors, and other key stakeholders in achieving the goals set out in the National Broadband Plan (2020–2025).
He said these collaborations would be essential in overcoming infrastructure development challenges and making broadband affordable and accessible for all Nigerians.
“These targets reflect our unwavering commitment to ensuring that broadband is accessible, affordable, and inclusive for all Nigerians. However, we are also aware of the challenges ahead,” he added.
Tijani stressed that achieving the government’s targets—70 per cent broadband penetration by 2025, a minimum internet speed of 25 Mbps in urban areas, and broadband access for 80 per cent of the population by 2027—will require sustained efforts.
“Achieving these goals will require more than just the efforts of the private sector. It will require a holistic approach that includes strategic partnerships with donors, investors, and other key stakeholders in accelerating the rollout of critical infrastructure,” he said.
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