Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,812 members, 7,820,851 topics. Date: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 at 11:14 PM

How Young People In The Niger Delta Are Being Left Out Of Development - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / How Young People In The Niger Delta Are Being Left Out Of Development (191 Views)

States Left Out Of Tinubu’s Ministerial List Revealed / Reno Omokri Reacts To Allegations Of Igbos Being Left Behind In Sudan / How Young Nigerians, Professionals Can Get Jobs – Fashola (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

How Young People In The Niger Delta Are Being Left Out Of Development by Shehuyinka: 3:02pm On Aug 13, 2020
TWENTY years ago, local resistance arose in the Niger Delta because of the way oil revenue was being shared and how oil pollution was undermining local livelihoods.

Young people helped bring development agencies to the region through their activism for social justice. The government eventually created the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to bring development closer to the region in response to local demands. Local people welcomed it with a renewed sense of belonging within the national community. But now, 20 years later, they have been left behind in regional developmentand young people’s lives, in particular, have not improved.

Local elites have hijacked the Commission, and the agency is seriously under-performing. But these elites claim that’s the fault of national-level politicians who take a larger slice of the NDDC contracts. Since inception, the commission has received $40 billion to invest in development projects. These include road construction, health care, education and job creation. But there is very little on the ground to account for this money.

Contracts are often inflated. Projects get abandoned. And shoddiness is normal. Young people will have to live with the fallout. They are already suffering the impact of political corruption, because the money that should have been used to improve their lives has simply disappeared.

Unlike many young people, local leaders live a life of luxury.

Similarly the Amnesty Programme, implemented more recently to end violence in the Niger Delta and benefit young people, has been hijacked by elites and local politicians. Funds meant for youth development projects are often embezzled. Inflated contracts are awarded to the elite youths, and while the youths who enrolled as ‘ex-militants’ get monthly cash payments, their non-violent counterparts have nothing.

But this is not the whole story, as my research reveals. I wanted to understand young people’s perspectives of violence in the Niger delta, and to compare their perspectives with the explanations of institutional leaders. This comparison helped me to produce an analysis of youth violence that locates young people’s experiences within the institutional structures that contours their lives.

Research findings
My research found that while the local leaders undermine young people’s well-being through political corruption, they conceal their complicity, and maintain this inequality, through the way they explain youth violence. In sociological terms, these explanations are called doxa – meaning assumptions about people and explanations about reality which are popular, but not always true, and which reproduce exclusion. While direct violence in the form of deaths and bodily harm has declined in the Niger Delta because of the Amnesty programme, indirect violence in the form of exclusion has continued.

Local leaders explained that young people embrace violence because they are lazy and unwilling to work. ‘These youths are lazy, they think they have oil so if you give them job they don’t want it, just militancy’ an official from the Niger Delta Development Commission told me. This presents local leaders as hardworking people deserving of their wealth, while portraying young people as the lazy, undeserving poor. Attributing youth violence to laziness ignores the high unemployment rate in the Niger Delta. It also absolves the local leaders from failing to create jobs.

Local leaders also said youth violence occurs because young people are deviants and always ready to fight. ‘After taking Igbo (weed) and alcohol they want to fight everybody.’ ‘They are yahoo-yahoo (cyber fraud) boys, always clubbing.’ These are some of the common portrayals of young people by institutional leaders.

I visited many clubs for my research in the Niger Delta and saw young people laughing, dancing, sharing liquor and discussing plans on how ‘to leave this nonsense country’, as one of my respondents put it. Clubs serve as a space of solidarity for young people in a world where they feel left behind, and social drinking is their way of escaping boredom and the many frustrations of their daily life.

A director at the Commission said young people are incapable of good leadership while older people are wiser, and therefore better leaders. He was responding to my question about what he thinks of young people’s complaints that old people dominate leadership positions within development agencies, and this was a typical response. The idea that older people are better leaders legitimises the political domination of the older generation.

READ MORE: https://www.icirnigeria.org/how-young-people-in-the-niger-delta-are-being-left-out-of-development/

Re: How Young People In The Niger Delta Are Being Left Out Of Development by Nobody: 3:12pm On Aug 13, 2020
Shehuyinka:
TWENTY years ago, local resistance arose in the Niger Delta because of the way oil revenue was being shared and how oil pollution was undermining local livelihoods.


Local elites have hijacked the Commission, and the agency is seriously under-performing. But these elites claim that’s the fault of national-level politicians who take a larger slice of the NDDC contracts. Since inception, the commission has received $40 billion to invest in development projects. These include road construction, health care, education and job creation. But there is very little on the ground to account for this money.

Contracts are often inflated. Projects get abandoned. And shoddiness is normal. Young people will have to live with the fallout. They are already suffering the impact of political corruption, because the money that should have been used to improve their lives has simply disappeared.

I was opportuned to live in the Niger Delta for a while and I noticed how much their youths and general population have been brainwashed to blame the center for corruption, while their elders, elites and militants loot the provisions made for the Niger delta people.

They would tackle non-indigent professional working in an Oil and Gas company with his qualification, saying they are the ones eating their money, while their youths get free slots for jobs even if they don't know the job at all.

A poor Niger delta guy was telling me back then in Rivers state that he prefers their elders looting their money, bla bla bla... At the end of the day, the monies meant for them have been looted by their own people and now they don't talk.

With all the billions in the Niger Delta, only Akwa Ibom can show tangible developments, which are not even up to global standards...

13% oil derivation, NDDC, state allocation and taxes, nothing to show...

1 Like

Re: How Young People In The Niger Delta Are Being Left Out Of Development by Ugaboy: 3:13pm On Aug 13, 2020
NIGER DELTA WILL BE DEVELOPE IN 2099...No one should quote me, i no well
Re: How Young People In The Niger Delta Are Being Left Out Of Development by sageb: 7:25pm On Aug 13, 2020
The irony of a nation on a downhill spin.

(1) (Reply)

Opinion: Suspension-anambra Monarchs Deserve Worse / Lere: Garu APC Youths Says Gov Elrufai Is Doing Well, Vows To His Govt. / Soyinka Slams FG For Reintroducing Water Resources Bill After Past Failure

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 19
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.