The Pull of Abuja
Questions over a ₦153m office lease highlight a broader danger; Nigeria's newest development commission may become more attached to the capital than to the region it was created to serve.
Nigeria's institutions have an unhealthy habit of migrating towards Abuja, even when their mandates lie elsewhere. The South East Development Commission (SEDC), whose headquarters is in Enugu, was designed precisely to reverse that tendency. Yet recent exchanges with the Senate Committee overseeing the commission suggest that the capital's gravitational pull remains difficult to resist.
Among the questions raised was the reported expenditure of ₦153m on office accommodation in Abuja, alongside concerns over the utilisation of over ₦16bn already released to the commission.
These figures matter less for their size than for what they reveal about priorities.
The South East Development Commission exists because decades of neglect left the region's infrastructure, industry and ecology in need of focused intervention. The commission was conceived as an instrument for rebuilding and accelerating development in Nigeria's South-East. Its mandate is not abstract; roads, infrastructure, ecological restoration, industrialisation, human capital, and economic renewal across Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo. The region itself is the commission's reason for existence. It was deliberately headquartered in Enugu to ensure that its operations remained close to the communities it was established to serve. In principle, the commission should embody a departure from Nigeria's over-centralised tradition.
While maintaining some form of presence in the capital is sensible, however, with a headquarters already established in Enugu, the obvious question is why a rented office in Abuja should command ₦153m. What strategic necessity justifies such expenditure? Could a more modest arrangement not have sufficed? What opportunity costs are involved?
Development commissions should be austere institutions. Every naira spent on overhead should be treated as a naira unavailable for erosion control in Anambra, industrial infrastructure in Aba, roads in Ebonyi or power projects in Nnewi.
The Senate Committee's scrutiny should therefore be welcomed, oversight is not hostility. The more important question concerns the ₦16bn already released. How much has translated into actual projects? Which contracts have been awarded? What measurable outcomes exist? What proportion has been absorbed by administration?
These are not merely accounting questions, they are questions about institutional philosophy.
Nigeria has seen this movie before and it offers little comfort. The Niger Delta Development Commission, established with lofty ambitions, became synonymous with endless investigations into expenditures that often bore little resemblance to the developmental needs of the region it was established to serve. Headquarters and guest houses proliferated. Consultants multiplied. Committees convened. Meanwhile, many communities remained as underdeveloped as before.
The South East Development Commission was intended to avoid this fate.
The South-East has waited too long for reconstruction to settle for symbolism. It does not need another institution whose most visible assets are offices and expenditures. It needs roads, industrial parks, flood control, electricity and jobs.
The commission's success will not be measured by the quality of its address in Abuja, it will be measured by whether, years from now, the people of the South-East can point to tangible improvements in their lives and say that this institution justified its existence.
The Senate has asked questions, Nigerians deserve answers. More importantly, Ndi Igbo deserve results.