Connect with us

FEATURED

It’s Injustice To Work In N’Delta Offshore And Pay Tax Somewhere Else – Uduaghan 

Published

on

Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan immediate past governor of Delta State, says it was not right for offshore workers in the Niger Delta to take their taxes somewhere else outside the region.

Uduaghan spoke as a key note guest speaker at the Delta Online Publishers’ Forum (DOPF) 3rd lecture/convention held at Orchard Hotel and Suite, Asaba, Delta State capital.

Delivering a lecture titled: ‘Niger Delta Economy: Building a new face for the region’, Uduaghan said that among the injustices meted on the region is the point in which people from other regions come to enjoy the work facilities provided by the oil resources of the region but don’t reside in the states of the region thereby not paying the tax due to them to the states.

“We have a lot of people in Escravos working in the Niger Delta but they are paying taxes to governments outside Niger Delta.

“We are being oppressed year-in-year-out in the region. Persons are brought from outside Niger Delta for NYSC and are given employment opportunities, especially those from the south west, leaving Niger Deltans out,” the former governor said.

According to him, one major way to build a new face for the Niger Delta is to embark on urgent diversification of the region’s economy.

Advertisement

He said such diversification must be in the area of establishment of industries, human capital and infrastructure development through a concerted effort of stakeholders towards redeeming the lost glory of the region.

Thanking DOPF members for inviting him to deliver the lecture, which he described as a nice programme, he explained that the theme of the lecture is quite clear as it points out that building a new face for the region implies that ‘there is an old face’

He said it was needed to pull the region out of the red zone of youth restiveness and insecurity, pointing out that the issue of coming out of the red zone depended greatly on the federal and state governments for the purpose of harnessing the economic potentials of the region to benefit the people.

Dr. Uduaghan decried a situation where the Niger Delta which has limited land space is denied the benefit of its water space which the Federal government has declared a no go area by the states.

“There cannot be a part of Nigeria that is a no man’s land. The offshore areas belong to the states,” he said.

He argued that for the region to wear a new face, concerted effort was needed to diversify the economic fortune of the region to viable areas of human endeavours, using the proceeds from oil to build infrastructures so as to stimulate boom of other areas of the economy.

Advertisement

He said this was the idea that informed his administration’s three-point agenda of Peace and security, human capital and infrastructure development, pointing out that his administration’s mantra of ‘Delta Beyond oil’ is a programme that will go beyond the life span of any government. “

“We are talking now of Niger Delta Beyond oil, we need to build critical infrastructures that will stimulate economic activities that are not oil related like railroads, among others,” he said.

He therefore urged the Niger Delta states to put up policies to stimulate economic development.

The former governor called for sustained engagement in human capital development in the areas of acquisition of knowledge.

Uduaghan said: “Knowledge has a lot of benefits and education is very key. A society where the people are not educated, I term them as people who are facing disaster.”

He called for more investment in human capital development programmes/initiatives on prospective youths and women. “Niger Delta is well geographically positioned and endowed with human and natural resources,” Uduaghan said.

Advertisement

In building a new face for Niger Delta, Dr. Uduaghan said there is need to stimulate informal enterprises which are the primary sources of livelihood for the people who account for 85 per cent of the population.

“Nigeria ranks fourth among cocoa producers in the world, and the Niger Delta region produces 53 per cent of the country’s output. It is an important crop – earning non-oil foreign exchange.

“Cross River, Ondo and Edo states are the leading producers in the Niger Delta Region, producing about 97 per cent of the region’s cocoa. Yet, the major processing for cocoa is in Western Nigeria, around Lagos, so major value addition takes place outside of the Niger Delta Region because the region has no industries.

Continuing, he said; “We have been very hostile in the Niger Delta to investors. I hope we can improve on our reception to industries coming to the region. We must be hospitable to industries.

“We must encourage people to have large scale farms in rice, sugar cane, cocoa, roots and tubers, citrus fruits, plantain, rubber, even as the region is blessed with many resources for aquaculture and forestry,” Uduaghan said.

He said cultivation of industries related to these products deserve the active and collaborative support of the state governments, oil and gas companies and other stakeholders in the region.

Advertisement

“We need the air, waters and soil of the Niger Delta; there has to be a lot of environmental remediation in the Niger Delta because we don’t have land.

The former governor however decried the moribund state of the ports in the region, and tasked the Federal government to open up the ports to attract investors into the region, a development he said would bring employment and stem criminality in the nation.

He decried a situation where the ports in Niger-Delta have been of sub-optimal performance.

Uduaghan also stressed that the Federal government should carry out environmental remediation of the oil polluted land and rivers of the region in line with relevant laws; noting that Niger-Delta region is an agrarian area where its people depend on for source of livelihood.

While paying growing tributes to the contributions of ex-militant, Mr. Government Oweide Ekpemukpolo, aka Tompolo that has brought government attention to the region, he called on all stakeholders in the region to be persuasive in their approach to allow investors into the region.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment
NIGER DELTA14 hours ago

Delta Opens Registration for Tertiary Institutions Entrepreneurship Programme

BUSINESS1 day ago

Bayo Ojulari Reveals Political Pressure to Keep Nigeria’s Refineries Operating Despite Heavy Losses

COMMUNITY REPORT2 days ago

Isoko South Chair Felicitates Delta First Lady Tobore on Her 56th Birthday

COMMUNITY REPORT2 days ago

Isoko North Boss Celebrates Delta First Lady, ‘True and Worthy Daughter of Isoko Nation,’ on Her 56th Birthday

FEATURED2 days ago

Former MD of NEXIM Bank, Robert Orya, Jailed 490 Years Over Alleged N2.4 Billion Fraud

FEATURED2 days ago

Delta Police Rescue Four Abducted Passengers, Arrest Suspected Cultist

COMMUNITY REPORT2 days ago

Sen. Nwoko Eulogies Delta First Lady, Tobore Oborevwori at 56

NEWS2 days ago

Oborevwori Celebrates Wife, Tobore at 56

COMMUNITY REPORT2 days ago

Aniagwu Condoles DBS, Delta Journalists Over Death of Vivian Nkechika

COMMUNITY REPORT2 days ago

Cubana Millennium City Asaba: Proof of Oborevwori’s Investor-Friendly Delta

international fraud ring
FEATURED2 days ago

80bn Fraud Trial of Kogi Ex-Governor’s Yahaya Bello Continues as Court Seeks Proof of Payment for Evidence

FEATURED2 days ago

Okesanjo: Meet Newly Appointed ICPC’s Resident Consultant, Strategy and Communications

Defense and Security2 days ago

Nigeria-France Strengthen Defence Cooperation as COAS Receives French Defence Attache

COMMUNITY REPORT2 days ago

Isoko North Chair Reaffirms Commitment to Free Primary Six Enrollment Programme

FEATURED2 days ago

Christian Genocide: US Army Chief Explains Motive Behind American Soldiers’ Deployment to Nigeria

Advertisement
Advertisement

z