By Musa Baba Adamu

Federal Government’s plan for a Federal University and other infrastructures in Ndokwa area of Delta State must not be allowed to fail, Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege, has said.
Speaking in Abuja while receiving a delegation of Okpai Clan Development Committee (OCDC) in his office, Senator Omo-Agege noted that it was unbelievable that communities in Okpai and other parts of Ndokwa Nation that continue to contribute significantly to the nation’s economy have been marginalised to the point that they hardly have any visible federal and state presence.
The delegation, which came to tender unreserved apologies to Senator Omo-Agege over the unruly behaviour of some of its youths during an earlier visit to Okpai, was led by OCDC Chairman, Comrade Amaechi Azugwuni.
He applauded the Delta Central lawmaker for the support given to sponsor of the bill seeking to establish the institution, Senator Peter Nwaoboshi.
It would be recalled that the bill for the establishment of the Federal University of Agriculture and Technology, Aboh (FUATA) passed Second Reading on the floor of the Senate last week.
Reacting to some demands made by Azugwuni, especially on the marginalisation of the community in the areas of employment, federal appointments and inclusion of the Okpai community in the budget of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Omo-Agege said that he is determined to work with all stakeholders towards actualizing a power project that had remained on the drawing board for many years under various administrations until President Muhammadu Buhari administration decided to sign the contract in 2015.
“I have listened to the presentation from the Palace. It takes a big mind to apologise, especially when you are doing so on behalf of others.
“I hold nothing against the kingdom and its people; politics is about service. We are your servants and messengers.”
Earlier, Comrade Azugwuni emphasized that unruly youths whose rowdiness sabotaged Senator Omo-Agege’s visit to the community on May 29 this year, must have been sponsored by enemies of the clan.
He lamented that more than sixty decades of oil production in the area which hosted Shell, along with other oil companies and more than 150 oil exploration wells and West Africa’s largest gas plant and an Independent Power Plant (IPP) that contributes over 900 megawatts to the national grid, still lacks electricity and other direct developmental benefits.
“That was why the kingdom was so pained that your visit which could have afforded us the long expected opportunity to state our myriad of denials, injustices and problems was aborted by some hoodlums paid by the enemies of Okpai to do so,” Azugwuni said.

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