President Muhammadu Buhari has directed Vice President Yemi Osinbajo 
to head the special presidential delegation charged with the task of 
resolving the crisis in the Niger Delta region.
The Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs, retired 
Brigadier General Paul Boroh disclosed this to newsmen on Monday in 
Abuja.
The choice of Osinbajo as leader of the government’s 
fact-finding delegation to the crisis-ridden region was informed by 
President Buhari’s strategic plan to engender peace in the region
Until Osinbajo’s appointment, the Niger-Delta elders were leading the delegation on the resolution of the crisis.
However, with the new presidential directive, Boroh said that the Vice President would be heading the delegation.
According to him, this will meet the President’s expectations of not 
only building confidence among the people on government’s intentions but
 also help in its fact-finding mission on a workable and lasting 
solution.
“President Buhari knew what he was doing when he directed the Vice President to head the delegation.
“You need to see him in action when he visited different communities in the oil-producing states.
“There is no doubt that the President knows that peace in the Niger 
Delta region is crucial to the development of the entire country,’’ 
Boroh said.
He said that the visit of the vice president to the Niger Delta was in phases to cover all Niger Delta states.
According to him, So far we have visited Akwa Ibom, Edo, Bayelsa, Rivers and Imo states.
“The next phase will be Cross River, Abia and Ondo states. By that we would have covered the entire Niger Delta states.
“This visit is in two folds. It is both a confidence-building and a 
fact-finding mission because a lot of information has been heard about 
the Niger Delta but no single person can claim to know all about the 
Niger delta.
“It requires effort by all stakeholders toward ensuring that issues of the Niger delta are resolved,” he said.
He also explained that efforts were on to pay beneficiaries of the amnesty programme studying abroad.
Boroh said that the problem arose due to the inability of the Federal
 Government to meet its financial obligations in the various countries.
The coordinator said the Amnesty Office would have to offset a lot of
 liabilities when funds allocated to it were eventually released.
He, however, said that priority would be given to the foreign beneficiaries, especially those graduating soon.
Boroh said that the Amnesty Office daily deals with false allegations
 made against it by some aggrieved youth craving to benefit from the 
programme.
He said that the programme is at the integration phase and it would 
be difficult to accommodate new entrants, who were not captured when the
 amnesty offer was first put in place.

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