http://newsdiaryonline.com/time-for-big-business-in-niger-delta-by-daniel-alabrah/
Following a memorandum by the Niger Delta Development Commission
(NDDC) on the growth and industrialization of the oil producing states
in Nigeria, the Federal Government recently approved 44 projects for the
Niger Delta. According to the Information Minister, Labaran Maku, the
projects include the construction of roads, bridges (and) environmental
projects as part of the phased development of the region. The projects
are expected to spur economic development of the region.
The move represents a welcome response to calls on the Federal
Government to apply the resounding success of the Presidential Amnesty
Programme (PAP) as a lever for the limitless economic, industrial and
social changes in the Niger Delta. The argument is that if peace is the
outcome of amnesty, there must be a progression that we must refer to as
the fallout of peace. The process does not terminate at the point where
we have drawn on amnesty to achieve a cessation of hostilities and
attained calm in the region.
There must be a continuum where the new thesis of peace must also
give birth to a new set of enterprises. We must relate amnesty to the
rubric of dialectics. Only then can we understand the full potential and
advantages of what the scheme has offered the country and its citizens.
If the pre-amnesty era produced in the Niger Delta a horde of armed
lords and their acolytes that were protesting the hijack of their
God-given resources and the resultant clashes between them and the state
crippled the nation’s economy and scared local and foreign investors,
it follows that a post-amnesty era must logically have its own soil
(conditions) of productive (non-destructive) result. We must see the
Federal Government’s move on these 44 projects in the Niger Delta in
that dialectical light.
Amnesty’s peace is not peace for the sake of peace. It is a soil in
which we must sow seeds of development and investment. It is a soil from
which will arise “a strong manufacturing base… so that we could offer
opportunities for employment, innovations and dignified living to all
Nigerians,” according to the Special Adviser to the President on Niger
Delta and Chairman, Presidential Amnesty Programme, Hon. Kingsley Kuku.
The Niger Delta should now be the fulcrum of the country’s industrial
development and partnership with foreign investors, thanks to amnesty.
To get an objective appreciation of what this piece is about, let us
look at the pattern of Chinese economic intervention in Africa in recent
years. China has been initiating apex-level contact with the continent
lately. Recently, President Hu Jintao led economic-cum-diplomatic
delegations to at least five African nations. He was in Nigeria,
Tanzania, Mauritius, Senegal and Mali. A close check revealed that some
of these were societies in transition, where after conflict resulting
from challenges in nation-building, a definite path is now being chosen
as an enduring foundation for progress.
The Chinese are a calculating lot. They engage in business in
societies that have potential for growth; where there is peace and
stability along with the generous provision of renewable resources and
sustainable energy. Amnesty has the paved way for Nigeria to assume
these magnets for investments. It is conceivable, therefore, that the
Chinese, whose country has effectively emerged as the world’s second
biggest economic player, would see Niger Delta’s bouquet of
developmental invectives through the amnesty programme and the Federal
Government’s initiative as a green light to invest in the area.
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