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Governors ‘responsible for’ Niger Delta’s economic woes

Moses Siasa, chairman of Nigerian Young Professionals Forum (NYP), has accused some governors in the Niger Delta region of not fully tapping into the economic potentials of the region.

Speaking on the sidelines of the just concluded Niger Delta CEO’s Conference in Port Harcourt, Siasia said they are creating an army of youth who may soon rise up against the zone.

He described the region as economically viable, calling on leaders to harness the energy and ideas of young people.

“There is no society that has advanced without its human beings. The greatest resource or asset of every society is in its people,” he said.

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“I have met a lot of experts and professionals from the Niger Delta region who are doing extremely well in different fields of endeavour. We must ensure that we identify and engage them. Countries that have advanced such as China, Singapore, Malaysia and others, looked at their bests brains and how they can actually make them contribute their expertise to engineer economic growth.

“As key stakeholders, we must urgently harness the mass energy and idealism of our young people into productive ventures. Agriculture also has great potentials in the Niger Delta region. We have great soil for cassava cultivation, and rice production. We can have three seasons of rice production in a year without any form of irrigation. But in the Northern Nigeria today that have taken the glory for rice production, it is difficult to do three seasons of farming without irrigation.

“We must ensure we do a lot of plantain plantation and also encourage local governments to go into the production of plantain. We also have ogbono, pepper, vegetables and many others. These are crops that can grow in our region and we can use them for the collective good of our people.”

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Siasia said the region has not done well in the area of oil and gas exploration and production, saying the failure of the Niger Delta to build the capacity of its people has made other geopolitical zones to take over service and ownership of oil assets.

He said Bayelsa alone houses 75 percent of gas deposit in the entire country but has not translated into economic benefit to the people of the state.

“Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Iran and many other big countries do not have the level of gas reserve Bayelsa has today,” he said.

“So, we must be able to tap into the oil and gas industry and create jobs for our people who have been impoverished. There are a lot of our people who have been trained either as welders, civil engineers, underwater divers but have not been engaged. We must prepare our people to take over the oil and gas sector.”

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While expressing dissatisfaction that doing business in the Niger Delta is quite challenging, Siasia called on governors in the region to support young business owners.

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