Cosmetic Governance vs Real Development in Delta State. By Chief Malcolm Emokiniovio Omirhobo


No fewer than 10,000 students receiving sanitary products is commendable  but let us be honest: this is a cosmetic intervention in the face of deep economic decay.

The real questions remain unanswered:

How many Deltans are employed today?

What concrete steps have been taken to industrialise the state and create sustainable jobs?

What is happening to the Warri and Koko seaports that should be major economic gateways for trade, shipping, and employment across the Niger Delta?

What has become of the Warri Refinery a  national asset that ought to be refining fuel, creating thousands of jobs, and stimulating local industries?

A government that celebrates distribution of sanitary pads while refineries remain idle, ports underutilised, and youths unemployed is not engaging in development .  it is managing perception.

Governance is not about seasonal charity.

Governance is about building infrastructure, creating jobs, reviving industries, and restoring dignity to the people.

Delta does not need handouts.

Delta needs functioning ports, working refineries, thriving industries, and mass employment.

Until these fundamental issues are addressed, programmes like these  though helpful  remain nothing more than public relations exercises masking deeper failures of economic leadership.

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