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    Home » SEDC: Do not let the vultures prevail – Ikenga Editorial
    Editorial

    SEDC: Do not let the vultures prevail – Ikenga Editorial

    EditorBy EditorMarch 2, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read

    Infrastructure remains foundational. The Commission’s blueprint prioritizing regional rail connectivity that integrates the five South-East states into a cohesive economic and manufacturing hub deserves urgent attention. Efficient transport networks reduce transaction costs, stimulate trade, and attract investment. The economic logic of well paved roads and reliable rail systems requires no elaborate explanation. It is universally established.

    Earlier this month, the South East Development Commission (SEDC) announced its presence with ambition and visibility. Its four-day regional conference in Enugu, branded South East Vision 2050, brought together public officials, private investors, technocrats, and development partners to align priorities, validate strategies, and chart a coordinated pathway for the long-term development of the region. By most accounts, it was an impressive outing. The optics were deliberate, the conversations elevated, and the mood cautiously hopeful.

    At the centre of this initiative is Mark Okoye Jr., the urbane Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Commission. In many respects, he represents a generational shift. Trained in Finance and Investment at George Washington University, refined through executive programs at the Harvard Kennedy School, and an alumnus of the Obama Foundation Leaders Africa Program, he reflects the global competence that young Nigerians increasingly demand of public leadership. He previously served as Commissioner for Economic Planning and Budget in Anambra State and later led the state Investment Promotion and Protection Agency, where he supervised multiyear development plans, strengthened revenue mobilisation, and attracted significant private investment. On paper, he possesses the credentials of a transformative leader.

    Yet, Nigeria has repeatedly demonstrated that pedigree alone does not guarantee institutional success. Institutions rarely collapse because conferences are missed or reports delayed. They falter when budgets are captured and quietly consumed by entrenched interests. The stakes for the South East Development Commission could not be higher.

    During his presentation of the SEDC 2026 budget before the Senate Committee, Mr. Okoye laid out a ₦165 billion proposal: ₦140 billion from the Federal Government and ₦25 billion counterpart funding from the five South-East states. Capital projects and strategic investments account for ₦106.7 billion, roughly 76 percent of the total, while recurrent non-personnel expenditure totals ₦25.9 billion. Personnel costs, salaries, and benefits consume ₦7.3 billion, just over five percent.

    At first glance, the capital allocation appears commendable. Investment in roads, power infrastructure, industrial parks, and other catalytic ventures is indispensable to any serious development agenda. Yet, despite his rhetorical flourish, Mark struggled to justify several contentious line items.  ₦400 million was reportedly set aside for conferences and town halls, with allegations that the recent four-day summit alone consumed ₦460 million. Equally perplexing are the allocations of ₦10.5 billion for security equipment, including drones, alongside an additional ₦3.5 billion earmarked for broader security initiatives. These figures demand rigorous clarification and transparent justification.

    The reaction was swift. Senator Tony Nwoye openly questioned whether these priorities align with the urgent needs of the region. His concerns have resonated across policy circles and among stakeholders. Dialogue is important, and consultation has its place. However, in an era defined by digital communication and virtual engagement, four hundred million naira for town hall meetings is difficult to justify. Fiscal discipline must accompany vision.

    This debate is not solely about numbers. It is about symbolism and trust. When a region grappling with decaying infrastructure, youth unemployment, capital flight, and persistent security challenges observes such allocations, skepticism naturally follows. Citizens begin to question whether development is substantive or merely performative. If the Federal Government genuinely intends to reshape the narrative of marginalization in the South-East, it will not be achieved through well photographed gatherings. It will be achieved through measurable outcomes: highways linking Imo, Abia and Ebonyi, functional rail connections integrating commercial hubs, reliable electricity powering factories, and industrial corridors connecting Anambra and Enugu. The South-East does not need another theatre of consultation. It requires execution.

    Opportunity cost must also be considered. Every four hundred million naira directed toward conferences is four hundred million naira not invested elsewhere. Even a fraction of that sum, if redirected toward strengthening initiatives such as the South East Maths Olympiad, a science and technology focused program nurturing analytical and problem-solving skills among students, could transform hundreds of young lives. In the twenty first century, intellectual capital is leverage. While other regions are advancing rapidly in financial technology and digital enterprise, our youth must be positioned not merely to participate but to lead. Investment in coding academies, innovation hubs in Aba, Abakaliki, Awka, Enugu, and Owerri, venture capital pipelines, and diaspora partnerships will generate returns that far exceed the applause of any summit.

    Infrastructure remains foundational. The Commission’s blueprint prioritizing regional rail connectivity that integrates the five South-East states into a cohesive economic and manufacturing hub deserves urgent attention. Efficient transport networks reduce transaction costs, stimulate trade, and attract investment. The economic logic of well paved roads and reliable rail systems requires no elaborate explanation. It is universally established.

    The effort to attract diaspora investment is commendable, yet patriotism alone cannot substitute for sound economics. Investors respond to regulatory clarity, security, transparency, and credible returns. If Lagos or Abuja offers superior conditions, capital will flow accordingly. Establish those same conditions in Enugu, Aba, or Onitsha, and investment will follow organically. The principle is simple. Create an enabling environment, and capital responds.

    A more difficult truth must also be acknowledged. Mark Okoye is young, but he did not arrive in this position solely by generational merit. Nigerian public appointments often occur within networks of influence. Some of those benefactors now occupy positions within the broader budgetary ecosystem surrounding the Commission. Their presence is real. Their expectations are real. The youth of the region, long critical of older politicians for mismanaging national wealth, are watching closely. Mark is not merely managing one hundred and sixty-five billion naira. He carries the credibility of a generation determined to prove that leadership can be different.

    The greatest threat is not necessarily blatant corruption. It is incremental compromise. It is the gradual normalization of inflated contracts, fragmented projects, opaque procurement, and political accommodation. The experience of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) stands as a cautionary example of how noble mandates can be undermined by patronage and weak oversight.

    The South East Development Commission must, therefore, adopt a disciplined institutional model. It must not evolve into a bloated bureaucracy. While personnel costs currently account for a modest portion of the budget, vigilance is essential to ensure that administrative expansion does not erode development impact. At the same time, wholesale outsourcing without internal technical competence would invite weak supervision and inflated contracts. The appropriate path lies in a hybrid structure: a lean and highly competent internal technical core of engineers, project finance experts, procurement specialists, and monitoring professionals, combined with the competitive engagement of contractors under strict supervision. Transparent bidding processes, digital project tracking, publicly accessible dashboards, independent audits, and measurable performance indicators are indispensable. That is how one prevents capture.

    Responsibility does not rest solely with the Managing Director. The Senate Committee must sustain its insistence on accountability. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, under whose Renewed Hope Agenda the Commission was established, must ensure that the institution fulfills its mandate. Oversight must be sustained. Accountability must be non-negotiable. Political protection must never shield inefficiency.

    The South-East has waited too long for structured federal intervention. Hope in Nigeria is fragile. When betrayed, it hardens into cynicism.

    Mark Okoye stands at a defining crossroads. He may choose expedient compromise, rationalizing each concession as political necessity. Or he may insist on discipline, transparency, and measurable progress, even when it unsettles powerful interests. History will not judge the eloquence of budget presentations. It will judge whether roads were constructed, industries revived, youth empowered, and capital attracted.

    The South East Development Commission can become a genuine engine of transformation or another instrument of patronage. For a region that has endured neglect and suspicion, the choice must be clear.

    We must not let the vultures prevail.

    Editor
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