IYC Knocks Sylva On ₦621.2bn NNPC Road Projects

Timipre Sylva: Nobody Will Repair Nigeria For Us
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva
WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
Telegram
LinkedIn
Print

The Ijaw Youths Council (IYC) Worldwide has carpeted the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, for not doing enough to protect the interest of the Niger Delta region in the ₦621.2 billion road projects to be undertaken across the country by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

The IYC in a statement signed on Wednesday by its President, Peter Timothy Igbifa, said the youths would not rest until Sylva took expected steps to remedy the injustice done to the region in the distribution of the 21 road projects.

Read Also: PIA: Ex-Militants Issue Fresh Threats, Blame Sylva, Senators

‘We find it unbelievable that a Minister, who hails from the most marginalised region and whose state, Bayelsa, lacks reasonable federal presence despite its sacrifice to the Nigerian project, would be missing at a meeting where the NNPC, which is under his ministry took a decision to share road projects at the detriment of the Niger Delta’, Igbifa said.

‘As we speak, Sylva does not have a road to his Okpoma community in Brass Local Government Area of the state. The joint efforts between the Bayelsa State Government and the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) to take a road to Brass only ended in Nembe.’

‘The section between Nembe to Brass, the local government area of Sylva, would have been included in the NNPC project if Sylva had been alive to his duties as a minister.’

‘There are other roads in Bayelsa, Rivers, Ondo, Edo and other states of the Niger Delta, that should have been included in the project list.’

‘The inequality, injustice and inequity that characterised this project distribution give eloquent credence to allegations that Sylva and other ministers from our region do not have the interest of the Niger Delta at heart.’

The youths reminded Sylva that the NNPC owed its existence to the Niger Delta insisting that the corporation could not for the first time be undertaking such projects without paying adequate attention to ‘a region it has almost rendered uninhabitable because doing so is, to say the least, provocative and a recipe for another violent conflict’.

 

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

WhatsApp
Facebook
Twitter
Telegram
LinkedIn
Print