Emmanuel Addeh writes that
there is a conscious effort to change Bayelsa State’s reputation as a
backward state to one of the most advanced among its peers.
Bayelsa State is peculiar in many
respects. But one of the most striking features of the oil-producing
state which has over 70 per cent of its total land space under water, is
its complex topography.
With an area of about 21,110 square
kilometres, picturesque tropical rain forest, low lands stretching from
Ekeremor to Nembe, a maze of meandering creeks and mangrove swamps, the
state remains one of its kind in the Nigeria’s South-south region.
But added to the thick, swampy forests,
the natural terrain has combined with the vicissitudes of oil
exploitation to make the entire configuration very difficult, especially
for landmark projects.
Every little piece of land for any
project is built from scratch, literally. Essentially, what that means
is that you build the land first, before thinking of locating any
infrastructure on it.
Many people have described the state in
many ways. Some have characterised the state, especially the capital in
somewhat unflattering terms. But all that is changing. Bayelsa, tucked
in the heartlands of the Niger Delta, is gradually opening up to the
world.
It would appear that the current
political leadership in the state has realised that without investment
in infrastructure, the state would remain in the backwater, stripped of
sustainable development and jeopardising the future of generations
unborn.
Seemingly slowly but steadily, Bayelsa
appears to be taking an integrated approach to infrastructural
development, with various parts and aspects closely linked to form a
whole.
From agriculture to transport, from health to tourism, education to sports, there is a conscious effort, many agree, to lift the state away from the toga of being backward to one of the most advanced among its peers.
From agriculture to transport, from health to tourism, education to sports, there is a conscious effort, many agree, to lift the state away from the toga of being backward to one of the most advanced among its peers.
Created 20 years ago, the young state is
fast catching up with the rest of the world with the renewed effort to
give the much needed infrastructure a facelift.
Those who were present when the state was
created by the late Head of State, Gen Sani Abacha, say the entire
place was like the biblical universe during its creation; formless and
desolate.
However, after 17 years of democracy, Bayelsa is taking shape. It is not where many think it should be, but the state is also not where it was on creation.
However, after 17 years of democracy, Bayelsa is taking shape. It is not where many think it should be, but the state is also not where it was on creation.
Projects are springing up and if the
momentum is sustained, Bayelsa would soon become a major hub for
business and recreation in the next couple of years.
On a tour of major projects last week,
Governor Seriake Dickson who visited various ongoing works, underscored
the need to open up the state to the rest of the world.
The governor inspected the current
upgrading of the Samson Siasia Stadium to a world class sports facility,
the massive Bayelsa Diagnostics Centre, the ongoing Governor and Deputy
Governor’s office complex, the Oxbow Lake, the airport project, golf
course, heliport, among many others.
At the completed Diagnostics Centre, Dickson bemoaned the incessant cases of wrong diagnoses of ailments in the country, noting that it remained a major challenge to Nigerians.
At the completed Diagnostics Centre, Dickson bemoaned the incessant cases of wrong diagnoses of ailments in the country, noting that it remained a major challenge to Nigerians.
Dickson revealed that the problem
motivated him to make a huge investment in the health sector of the
state to serve as a heath tourism centre for Bayelsans, Nigerians and
indeed the rest of Africa.
He explained that the state’s ultra-modern Diagnostics Centre in Yenagoa, having been fully completed, had already commenced a dry run of the equipment and called on residents to put the hospital to good use.
He explained that the state’s ultra-modern Diagnostics Centre in Yenagoa, having been fully completed, had already commenced a dry run of the equipment and called on residents to put the hospital to good use.
“What we are addressing now is diagnosis.
Because what is killing our people is wrong and inaccurate diagnosis.
So we are addressing that. We are building hospitals and this place will
feed most of them,” the governor noted.
Describing the huge project as ‘world
class’, the governor said the vision of his administration was to make
the state a haven for people who need to satisfy their health needs.
The centre operated by Trigen-Craton in
the heart of Yenagoa offers radiology services with the latest
facilities in the industry including MRI- Tesla, CT Scan 160 slice,
digital x-ray, 40-sonography, mammography among others.
It also specialises in pathology which includes services like haematology, clinical chemistry, immunology and endocrinology.
Other services rendered by the centre are: DNA testing, Endoscopy, cardiology and general wellness.
During the inspection, the governor noted
that the project was built to last, explaining that all Nigerians could
access the services of the centre from now.
“From the report, this project has been
completed a long time. What they are just doing is to test-run the
facilities. All the machines are world class. All the projects have been
painstakingly done.
“This is a project that will stand the
test of time and it is of the highest possible quality. We are building a
Bayelsa that is for the future and this project is one of its kind in
the country and in Africa,” he said.
He added that the people of the state
would be grateful to the administration when they are able to access the
level of investment that was made on the project.
“Even if people don’t appreciate it, it
doesn’t matter, we are doing it for posterity. With the facilities here,
no Bayelsa person needs to go outside this place for diagnosis.
“Just anybody in this country can be
attended to here. We are taking an integrated approach to development.
People can fly in from the airport that we are building.
“Our philosophy is to bring the world to Bayelsa. This is medical tourism and we will build our economy this way,” he stressed.
The governor posited that when the other
350-bed hospital commences operation, it would complement the
diagnostics centre and make the state prominent for medical tourism.
The same enthusiasm is being channelled
into building the airport, which the state Commissioner for Works,
Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo said government was optimistic would welcome the
first flights in the next couple of weeks.
Ewhrudjakpo said that the Dickson’s
government would construct a temporary terminal building which would
later be converted to an executive protocol lounge.
He noted that the government was in a
hurry to test-run the airport to prove a point that not one naira of the
project was diverted.
“Some people have said that the governor used the money for re-election. If he used it for election, the contractors would have even left site now,” he said.
“Some people have said that the governor used the money for re-election. If he used it for election, the contractors would have even left site now,” he said.
The state government also seems to be
thinking seriously about taking the youths off the streets, with the
attention being paid to the upgrading of old sports facilities and
building of new ones.
It is also currently fast-tracking the ongoing rehabilitation work at the Samson Siasia Stadium in Yenagoa to keep the youths of the state busy and to ensure the state’s teams play their league games at home.
It is also currently fast-tracking the ongoing rehabilitation work at the Samson Siasia Stadium in Yenagoa to keep the youths of the state busy and to ensure the state’s teams play their league games at home.
The government is also dealing with the
issue of the poor drainage system outside the stadium complex and is
laying organic fibre turf on the football pitch and the tartan tracks of
the stadium.
“We are doing this to meet the required
international standards and this government is trying to open the state
to the international community and the sports sector must key in and
open up sports tourism,” the governor said.
Added to that, the state is also building
its own golf course to be able to draw the huge number of golfing
crowds that frequently travel across the country to play the game.
Dickson says the project is more than a
golf course, but a golf estate. The governor promises to ensure that
golf top shots around the world and youths in the state access the
facility.
“The essence of this government building and investing hugely in these projects is to diversify into other areas of the economy, aside from oil and gas,” Dickson said.
“The essence of this government building and investing hugely in these projects is to diversify into other areas of the economy, aside from oil and gas,” Dickson said.
He added, “Before we came here, we
stopped over at the heliport. People who are coming to play on the golf
course and polo field are coming to stay at the estate and enjoy these
tourist facilities.
“They can fly in and out and that’s why
we also built a heliport here. All the projects have gone really far.
The whole idea is to make Bayelsa a tourism hub and lay a foundation for
the future economic development of the state.”
The story was the same at the Oxbow Lake
project in Swali, very close to the ongoing federal secretariat and the
Central Bank of Nigeria, Yenagoa.
Enfolded in a blanket of romantic
ambience, the awe-inspiring aura of the beautiful lake is also set to
give visitors a memorable experience at the lakeside.
The project has a pavilion, boat club,
shopping mall linking the galleria and teens park, which is also
adjacent the Tower Hotel and has been designated the entertainment and
leisure zone of the state.
So, it’s not all gloom and doom for the
young state. It may have had its own share of political and economic
challenges, but Bayelsa is breaking free from all its strangleholds.
And when the current projects become
fully functional in the next few months, hopefully, the state may truly
live up to its sobriquet: “The glory of all lands.”
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