Contractors are said to have abandoned multibillion-naira road projects in Bayelsa State’s Akipelai, Ayakoro, and Otuoke localities, putting them at risk of being swept away by coastal erosion.
During former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, the Shore Erosion Control Works project was awarded in March 2012 with a 14-month completion deadline.
Jonathan is from Otuoke, a coastal town a few kilometers from the state capital, Yenagoa.
Following locals’ protests, the Nigerian Ports Authority granted the contract for N7.5 billion as part of its corporate social responsibility.
According to the Federation’s 2017 Audit Report, N4.2 billion was paid to contractors in 2015, accounting for 56.61 percent of the contract value.
During the physical inspection of the project, the audit report observed that it was discovered that the contractors had left the project site and the duration of the project had since lapsed without approval for its extension.
The report stated that the NPA had shown no concern or taken any significant measure to recover the money from the contractor, “which implies expenditure inefficiency on the part of the government and loss of benefits to the communities where the project was meant to be implemented.”
A civil society group, Paradigm Leadership Support Initiative, said it embarked on a fact-finding mission to the project sites after analysing and simplifying the 2017 audit report.
The group, which visited the communities in March 2020, said it discovered that the Shore Erosion Control Works project would have positively impacted Ayakoro, Akipelai and Otuoke as most houses were built close to the riverbank.
The PLSI stated in its report, “Young people in these communities complained about the abandoned project and the effects of flooding on their communities.
“A youth representative in the area, LoveGod Daniel, revealed that the contractors installed signage of the project only to come back months later to remove it. He further stated that nothing happened since the project signage was installed and removed.”
The group added that the residents confirmed that the contractors are Bayelsa indigenes, noting that project abandonment was an act of corruption and contravened Financial Regulations 224 and 230 (2009).
“Participants disclosed that the contractors are Bayelsans and by that should even be more accountable. About 30,000 (15,000 in Ayakoro, over 5,000 in Akipelai and more than 7,000 in Otuoke) residents of these underserved communities are being exposed to flooding and shoreline washed away by erosion,” the PLSI said.
The civil society organisation recommended immediate recovery of the unaccounted sum and prosecution of the contractors by anti-corruption agencies, enforcement of the Financial Regulation 3117 and re-award of the contract.