APC alleges N80bn Bayelsa airport project, fraud

The Bayelsa State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has alleged that the state airport project reportedly scheduled for inauguration soon is a cesspit of fraud.
APC said that the project was a “fraudulent scheme put up by Governor Seriake Dickson to facilitate the siphoning of state funds.”
APC State Publicity Secretary, Doifie Buokoribo, in a statement on Thursday in Yenagoa, alleged that the N80 billion plus Bayelsa airport project was built at vastly inflated costs, making it “clearly the most expensive airport project in Nigeria, as none of the 26 owned by the Federal Government or the eight owned by States is near that figure.”
According to the APC, Governor Henry Seriake Dickson collected a N40 billion credit facility from a commercial bank to commence work on the project as against the initial estimated cost of N40 billion.
“The Bayelsa State Governor himself disclosed in Amassoma, Southern Ijaw Local Government Council, on 26 May 2018 that N80 billion had already been spent by the State Government.
“Add to the new figure the loan interest of N32 billion, and the cost comes to N112 billion,” the party stated.
The APC said that the airport was economically unviable as it lacked vital intermodal network for easy accessibility.
The opposition party in the state described “the project, which has taken a heavy toll on the welfare of civil servants and the infrastructural needs of the state, as “symptomatic of a vision that is not only deficient but also diseased.”
“We know it as a matter of fact that state governments that built airports in the past are unable to sustain them and want the Federal Government to take them over. No self-respecting, patriotic and honest Nigerian should be associated with this kind of fraudulent project,” it further stated.
The statement reads in part: “While work on the airport project proceeded unhampered, the State Government ceaselessly complained about paucity of funds to meet what it termed infrastructure needs of the State.
“State-owned tertiary institutions, namely, Niger Delta University, Isaac Jasper Boro College of Education, Sagbama, and College of Health Technology, Otuogidi, have been repeatedly shut down following prolonged industrial actions by workers and demonstrations by students as a result of mass retrenchments and over 200 per cent increase in tuition and related fees.
“At NDU, for instance, where the State Government never undertook a single project from 2012 till 2017, the monthly subvention was slashed from N400 million monthly to N200 million monthly.
“The University Management was directed to generate funds by whatever means to augment what the Government provided. “Astronomical increase in fees for regular and part-time students could not take care of the shortfall, so mass retrenchments followed.
Those retrenched, like their counterparts in the mainstream civil service on half pay, could not afford the fees of their children and wards.”