Citizens' Priority Projects Compact for Nigeria, 2027–2028 – Executive Summary
Executive Summary  ·  BRass & FPSI
Budget Advocacy & Reforms Association

Citizens' Priority Projects
Compact for Nigeria

2027–2028  ·  A 774-LGA People's Development Agenda for Accountable Federal, State and Local Government Budgeting

Prepared By
BRAss in partnership with FPSI
Coverage
All 774 LGAs & FCT — 37 states/territories, 6 zones
Budget Cycles
Federal, State & LGA Budget Cycles 2027 & 2028
Accountability Tool
Community Budget Accountability Committees (CoBAC)

01  /  Overview

What the Compact Is

The Citizens' Priority Projects Compact for Nigeria, 2027–2028 is a comprehensive, evidence-based citizens' accountability instrument covering all 774 Local Government Areas of Nigeria and the Federal Capital Territory. It was developed by the Budget Advocacy & Reforms Association (BRAss) in partnership with the Financial Planning Skills Institute (FPSI) to give Nigerian communities a documented, structured record of their priority development needs — and to give civil society, journalists, legislators, and citizens a tool for tracking whether those needs are addressed in the 2027 and 2028 federal, state, and local government budget cycles.

The Compact is not a government plan. It is a citizens' demand document — and also a justice document that names the specific massacres, oil spills, environmental catastrophes, cultural lootings, and failed resettlements that have shaped the development deficits of Nigeria's communities.

For each of the 775 LGA profiles, the Compact documents the LGA's development context; its 8–12 highest-priority development needs with evidence classification; a table of 12–15 priority projects with responsible government tiers, evidence basis, expected impact, suggested indicators, and CoBAC tracking requirements; a government responsibility matrix; and a community validation protocol.

Citizens' Demand Document

Provides Nigerian communities a structured record of their priority development needs and gives civil society, journalists, and legislators a tool for holding governments accountable across all 775 LGA profiles.

Justice Document

Names the specific massacres, oil spills, environmental catastrophes, cultural lootings, and failed resettlements that have shaped development deficits — because those histories are not separable from the infrastructure gaps they have produced.

02  /  Methodology

Framework, Methodology & Structure

2.1 Project Priority Table Structure

Every LGA profile contains a priority project table with eight standardised columns: Project Number, Priority Project (title), Need Addressed, Responsible Government Tier, Evidence and Justification, Expected Impact, Suggested Indicator, and CoBAC Tracking Note. This structure ensures that each project is grounded in evidence, assigned to an accountable government tier, and linked to a measurable outcome that community monitors can track independently.

Template LGAs receive 12 standard projects calibrated to the state's primary agricultural and economic profile. Custom LGAs — the most significant LGA in each major city, heritage zone, oil community, or academic hub — receive 15 bespoke projects. Across 37 state documents, approximately 120 LGAs have custom profiles.

2.2 Evidence Classification

Label Standard Meaning
VERIFIED Highest Directly evidenced by government surveys, UNICEF, WHO, NBS MPI/NLSS, UNEP, academic literature, or peer-reviewed data.
Evidence-Informed Inference High Consistent with available evidence and analogous cases; not directly verified at LGA level but supported by sectoral and national data.
Community Reported Moderate Reported through community consultations, interviews, or local accounts; requires verification through formal survey.
Media Report Lower Based on credible media reporting; useful as trigger for investigation but requires independent verification.
Evidence Gap Flagged Need is suspected or logically inferred but no evidence base exists; flags a data gap that CoBAC or government should address as priority.

2.3 CoBAC — Community Budget Accountability Committees

Community Budget Accountability Committees (CoBAC) are the primary implementation and oversight mechanism of the Compact. Each LGA profile specifies CoBAC tracking requirements for every priority project. CoBAC's mandate includes obtaining and publishing LGA budgets quarterly, photographically documenting project sites quarterly, cross-referencing NDDC allocations against delivery in oil states, conducting monthly water quality testing where oil contamination is a risk, tracking MOSOP-verified progress in Ogoni LGAs, and escalating non-delivery to the National Assembly, state legislatures, and international bodies where warranted.

CoBAC Functional Desks

Agricultural desk, water desk, health desk, education desk, environmental desk (oil and mining LGAs), heritage desk (cultural tourism LGAs), women's desk, youth desk, and security desk (high-risk LGAs).

Community Validation Protocol

Each LGA profile specifies which traditional institutions, civil society bodies, and specialist agencies must be engaged before project design is finalised — in a defined sequence and with explicit safety considerations.

03  /  Scale & Scope

The Compact in Numbers

775
Total LGA Profiles
6
Geopolitical Zones
37
States & FCT
~9,500+
Priority Projects
~6,200+
Development Needs
~120
Custom LGA Profiles
12–15
Projects per LGA
~75,000+
Estimated Paragraphs
Compact Metric Figure Notes
Average LGAs per State~21Ranging from 6 (FCT area councils) to 44 (Kano)
Evidence Classification Labels5[VERIFIED], [EVIDENCE-INFORMED INFERENCE], [EVIDENCE GAP], [COMMUNITY REPORTED], [MEDIA REPORT]
Government Responsibility Tiers5Federal, State, LGA, Joint (Multi-tier), Community/PPP
Community Validation Steps per LGA5Per profile; engages traditional governance and civil society
CoBAC Tracking RequirementsPer projectQuarterly reporting, photographic evidence, cross-referencing, escalation
Security Classifications Used5Elevated, Moderate-Elevated, Moderate, Low (rare); Elevated most common in SS and SE

04  /  Zone & State Summaries

Zone and State Summaries

The following six sections provide zone-level overviews and state-by-state summaries capturing LGA count, NPC 2006 population base, NBS MPI 2022 poverty rate, primary economic activity, security context, and the most significant signature projects. Full LGA-by-LGA profiles are contained in the companion state documents.

# State Pop. MPI 2022 Security Primary Economy Compact Signature Projects & Themes
NORTH WEST ZONE  │  7 States  │  187 Local Government Areas — Most populous zone; highest aggregate poverty rates; severe infrastructure deficit; extraordinary cultural assets largely unrealised as economic assets.
1Jigawa4.3M82%ElevatedMillet; sorghum; rice; sesame; groundnut; Hadejia wetlands fisheryDutse state capital enterprise hub; Hadejia-Jama'are wetlands conservation; Katagum corridor irrigation; state-wide WASH and PHC emergency rehabilitation
2Kano9.4M79%ElevatedCommerce; leather; groundnut; textiles; kola nut; Kano city industriesKano Municipal (Emir; Kurmi Market; BUK/KUST enterprise); Dala (indigo dyeing heritage); leather and textile value chain revival; hisbah governance conflict-sensitive design
3Katsina5.8M81%Elevated (Banditry)Millet; sorghum; groundnut; livestock; sesameKatsina (Emir; Usman Dan Fodio heritage); Jibia (bandit-affected zone); IDP resettlement in 14+ LGAs; banditry conflict-sensitive design mandatory
4Kebbi3.2M77%ElevatedRice; onion (Jega); sorghum; millet; fish (Argungu)Birnin Kebbi; Argungu (UNESCO Fishing Festival); Kebbi-Sokoto rice corridor; Jega Onion branding and export platform; Kainji Lake community benefit
5Sokoto3.7M80%ElevatedMillet; sorghum; groundnut; leather; livestock; gum arabicSokoto (Sultan; UDUS; Caliphate heritage UNESCO nomination); Illela (Niger border trade); Caliphate leather heritage revival; gender-sensitive design throughout
6Zamfara3.3M80%Very Elevated (Banditry)Millet; sorghum; gold mining; livestock; groundnutGusau (Emir; FUDUS); gold mining community benefit and formalisation; IDP return and resettlement in 12 LGAs; security monitoring as condition precedent
7Kaduna6.1M68%Elevated (S. Kaduna)Maize; cotton; cassava; groundnut; livestock; mining; industryKaduna (Kajuru heritage conflict zone); Kafanchan (Southern Kaduna multi-ethnic reconciliation); Zaria (ABU; Emir of Zazzau); dedicated inter-ethnic mediation in 15+ LGAs; cotton textile revival
NORTH EAST ZONE  │  6 States  │  113 Local Government Areas — Epicentre of Boko Haram insurgency since 2009; ~2.5 million people remain displaced; post-conflict reconstruction is the primary development frame.
1Adamawa3.2M72%Elevated (Boko Haram legacy)Maize; sorghum; cassava; cattle; rubber; fishYola (Lamido; MAUTECH); Hong/Gombi (IDP return); Toungo eco-tourism; dedicated IDP livelihood restoration; IITA/IRAD maize linkage
2Bauchi4.7M77%ElevatedSorghum; millet; groundnut; cotton; livestock; Yankari eco-tourismBauchi (Emir; ATBU); Alkaleri (Yankari National Park gateway); Tafawa Balewa heritage; Yankari tourism infrastructure; groundnut oil processing
3Borno4.2M74%Very Elevated (Boko Haram)Millet; sorghum; groundnut; livestock; fish (Lake Chad); leatherMaiduguri (Shehu of Borno; UNIMAID); Bama; Gwoza; Dikwa; Lake Chad fisheries reconstruction; IDP return in 20+ LGAs; conflict reconstruction priority throughout
4Gombe2.4M73%Moderate-ElevatedSorghum; millet; groundnut; cassava; livestock; cottonGombe (Emir; FUG); Kaltungo (Tangale heritage); WASH emergency in all 11 LGAs; cotton textile revival; sorghum processing hub
5Taraba2.3M69%Elevated (HF conflict)Mango; cassava; maize; yam; cattle; rubber; tea (Mambilla)Jalingo; Wukari (Jukun heritage); Mambilla Plateau (tea; tourism; highest point in Nigeria); dedicated herder-farmer mediation in 12 LGAs
6Yobe2.3M76%Very Elevated (Boko Haram)Millet; groundnut; cowpea; livestock; fishDamaturu (Emir; FUY); Nguru Wetlands ecology; Potiskum commercial hub; IDP return in 15+ LGAs; Lake Chad fisheries cooperative
NORTH CENTRAL ZONE & FCT  │  7 States  │  120 Local Government Areas — Most geographically and ethnically diverse zone; Benue paradox of agricultural richness and herder-farmer conflict disruption.
1Benue4.3M57%Elevated (HF conflict)Yam; cassava; sorghum; beniseed; rice; fish; cattleMakurdi (Tor Tiv; BSUM); Gboko (Tiv cultural heartland); Gwer West (herder-farmer epicentre); dedicated Tiv-Fulani mediation in 18+ LGAs; Benue River fisheries cooperative
2FCT-Abuja1.4M30%ModerateCivil service; commerce; construction; agricultureAMAC (federal capital services); Gwagwalada (peri-urban food systems; UNFPA); Abaji (cassava, maize corridor); area council budget transparency as primary focus
3Kogi3.3M60%Moderate-ElevatedYam; cassava; cement; fish; iron ore (Ajaokuta)Lokoja (Attah Igala; Niger-Benue confluence heritage); Okene (Ebira; cement economy); Ajaokuta Steel community benefit accountability
4Kwara2.4M53%ModerateCassava; yam; maize; cotton; livestock; shea butter; textileIlorin (Emir; UNILORIN; Textile heritage); Offa market; UNILORIN innovation hub; Ilorin textile revival; shea butter export platform
5Nasarawa1.9M63%Moderate-Elevated (HF)Cassava; yam; sorghum; sesame; solid minerals; fishLafia (Nasarawa State Univ.); Keffi (Federal Poly Nasarawa); Akwanga (Eggon-Fulani conflict zone); solid minerals community benefit accountability
6Niger3.9M63%Moderate-ElevatedCassava; yam; sorghum; rice; fish; hydroelectric powerMinna (FUTMINNA; Sultan Bello heritage); Bida (Etsu Nupe; Bida Glass and brass crafts); New Bussa (Kainji Dam community benefit; relocation justice)
7Plateau3.2M56%Elevated (Jos conflict)Potato; vegetables; tin (mining heritage); cassava; maize; fishJos North (Gbong Gwom Jos; UNIJOS; multi-ethnic reconciliation); Barkin Ladi (most conflict-affected LGA); Shendam (Plateau South agriculture; Angas heritage)
SOUTH WEST ZONE  │  6 States  │  137 Local Government Areas — Most economically productive zone outside the oil sector; highest concentration of federal universities and research institutions.
1Ekiti2.4M50%ModerateCocoa; yam; cassava; palm oil; poultry; civil serviceAdo-Ekiti (Ewi; EKSU); Ikole (cocoa belt); cocoa value chain revival with CRIN; Ekiti Knowledge Economy Hub; Ewi heritage tourism
2Lagos9.0M25%Moderate-ElevatedFinance; commerce; manufacturing; film (Nollywood); maritime; logisticsLagos Island (Oba of Lagos; Kuramo Waters); Ikeja (industrial; LASUTH); Alimosho (most populous LGA in Nigeria); Eti-Osa (Lekki-Ikoyi; Atlantic coast); coastal protection; urban poverty equity
3Ogun3.7M44%ModerateCocoa; cassava; clay; manufacturing; limestoneAbeokuta (Alake of Egbaland; FUNAAB; Olumo Rock); Sagamu industrial corridor community benefit; Olumo Rock heritage tourism; cocoa revival with CRIN
4Ondo3.4M49%Moderate-ElevatedCocoa; cassava; palm oil; bitumen; rubber; fishAkure (Deji; FUTA); Okitipupa (bitumen zone; Ilaje fisherfolk); bitumen community benefit accountability; Ilaje coastal protection and fisheries
5Osun3.4M52%ModerateCocoa; cassava; yam; palm oil; gold (artisanal); cultural tourismOsogbo (Ataoja; Osun-Osogbo UNESCO Sacred Grove; UNIOSUN); Ile-Ife (Ooni; OAU; Ife Bronze heritage; Yoruba origin); Ede (LAUTECH)
6Oyo5.6M50%Moderate-ElevatedCassava; yam; cocoa; tobacco; livestock; commerce; IITA researchIbadan North (Olubadan; UI; UCH; Ibadan Museum); Oyo (Alaafin; Old Oyo National Park); Ogbomoso (Soun; LAUTECH); IITA agri-enterprise linkage; Old Oyo National Park eco-tourism
SOUTH EAST ZONE  │  5 States  │  95 Local Government Areas — Heartland of the Igbo people; shaped by civil war legacy and ongoing IPOB sit-at-home disruptions. IPOB scheduling sensitivity noted in every SE LGA profile.
1Abia2.8M65%Elevated (IPOB)Manufacturing (Aba); palm oil; cassava; rubberAba South (Ariaria Market; manufacturing; NAFDAC export); Arochukwu (Long Juju oracle heritage); Umuahia North (National War Museum; Biafra civil war memory)
2Anambra4.2M58%Elevated (IPOB)Commerce (Onitsha Main Market; Nnewi manufacturing); palm oil; cassava; InnosonAwka South (UNIZIK; Awka blacksmithing); Nnewi North (Innoson IVM; NAUTH; "Japan of Africa"); Onitsha North (Niger flooding); Aguata (Igbo-Ukwu 9th-century bronzes; repatriation advocacy)
3Ebonyi2.2M73%Elevated (IPOB; Izzi-Ezza)Rice (Abakaliki brand); cassava; brine salt; lead-zinc miningAbakaliki (EBSU; FMC; brine salt heritage; rice processing); Afikpo North (masquerade heritage); Izzi-Ezza conflict-sensitive design in 3 LGAs
4Enugu3.3M65%Elevated (IPOB)Coal (heritage); cassava; yam; palm oil; rice; UNN knowledge economyEnugu North (Iva Valley 1949 massacre memorial; Coal City heritage; UNTH); Nsukka (UNN 1960; Adichie literary heritage); Oji River (post-coal diversification)
5Imo3.9M68%Elevated (IPOB; security crisis)Palm oil; cassava; rubber; FUTO tech; Ohaji oil; Oguta LakeOwerri Municipal (FUTO; Mbari cultural heritage); Ohaji/Egbema (Shell SPDC; NDDC; oil spill remediation); Oguta Lake eco-tourism; Flora Nwapa Efuru literary heritage
SOUTH SOUTH ZONE  │  6 States  │  123 Local Government Areas — Contains the Niger Delta; source of the overwhelming majority of Nigeria's petroleum revenue; simultaneously among the country's most severely impoverished and environmentally damaged communities.
1Akwa Ibom3.9M57%ModerateOil (ExxonMobil); cassava; palm oil; Ibom Air; Maritime Academy; raffia craftUyo (UNIUYO; Ibom Air linkage); Eket (ExxonMobil community benefit; NDDC; creek ecosystem); Oron (Ekpu ancestral figures; Maritime Academy); Ikot Ekpene (Raffia City)
2Bayelsa1.7M69%ElevatedOil (SPDC; Agip; Forcados); fishing; cassava; boat access only for most LGAsYenagoa (Isaac Boro memorial; BSU; Ijaw National Congress); Nembe (Creek Trunkline — major spills; Akassa Raid); Ogbia (Oloibiri 1956 first oil well; reparations programme); Brass (NLNG; Agip)
3Cross River2.9M60%ModerateTourism (Calabar Carnival; CRNP; Obudu); cocoa; rubber; cassavaCalabar Municipal (Carnival; UNICAL; Efik heritage; Slave History Museum; Mary Slessor); Akamkpa (Cross River Gorilla ~250-300 remaining; CRNP eco-tourism); Obudu Mountain Resort; Bakassi (ICJ resettlement justice)
4Delta4.1M65%Elevated (Warri zone)Oil (Shell; Chevron; Agip; WRPC); palm oil; rubber; cassava; timber heritageWarri South (Urhobo-Itsekiri-Ijaw reconciliation as primary project); Oshimili South/Asaba (1967 massacre memorial; Federal recognition); Ughelli North (Shell; gas flaring monitoring); Sapele
5Edo3.2M58%Moderate-ElevatedRubber (RRIN HQ); palm oil; cassava; UNIBEN; Kingdom of BeninOredo (Benin Bronzes repatriation; EMOWAA/Adjaye Associates; Igun Street 600-year bronze guild; UNESCO nomination); Ikpoba-Okha (UNIBEN; UBTH); Etsako West (Auchi); Ovia North East (RRIN; Okomu National Park)
6Rivers5.2M57%Elevated (Most complex)Oil (all majors; NLNG); UNIPORT; Port Harcourt commerce; Ogoni agriculture (impacted)Port Harcourt (UNIPORT; multi-company oil benefit framework; NDDC full audit); Khana (Ken Saro-Wiwa/Ogoni 9 memorial; HYPREP acceleration; MOSOP-verified); Bonny (NLNG community benefit); Obio/Akpor (most populous LGA)

05  /  Structural Patterns

Cross-Cutting Themes Across the Compact

Twelve cross-cutting themes emerge consistently across the 775 LGA profiles, regardless of zone or state. These themes represent the most important structural development challenges and justice narratives in Nigeria's LGA-level development landscape.

Cross-Cutting Theme Scope Description & Compact Treatment
Infrastructure DeficitAll 36 states plus FCTRoads, water, PHC, and schools are deficit across every state; documented with VERIFIED evidence across >90% of rural LGAs.
Agricultural Processing GapAll 36 states plus FCTPrimary produce is sold raw in almost every agricultural LGA; NIFOR, RRIN, CRIN, WARDA, and RMRDC identified as primary processing rehabilitation partners.
NDDC AccountabilityAll 6 SS states; 123 LGAsNDDC allocations cross-referenced in every oil-producing LGA; CoBAC mandated to document all NDDC projects and escalate non-delivery to the National Assembly.
Knowledge Economy DeficitFederal and state university towns nationwideBrain drain crisis across UNIPORT, UNIBEN, UNIZIK, UNN, UNIUYO, OAU, UI, and others; dedicated innovation hub and enterprise ecosystem projects for each university town.
Women's Cooperative GapAll 36 states plus FCTWomen in agricultural, fisheries, craft, and commercial value chains lack cooperative structures throughout Nigeria; 300–500+ women per LGA as standard target across all templates.
Cultural Heritage JusticeMultiple statesBenin Bronzes (Edo); Iva Valley massacre (Enugu); Asaba massacre (Delta); Ken Saro-Wiwa/Ogoni 9 (Rivers); Igbo-Ukwu bronzes (Anambra); Arochukwu (Abia); Oloibiri reparations (Bayelsa); Bakassi resettlement (Cross River).
Environmental JusticeSS and SE oil statesHYPREP Ogoniland (Rivers); Nembe Creek Trunkline spills (Bayelsa); Shell Ughelli oil spills (Delta); gas flaring monitoring in all oil LGAs.
Herder-Farmer ConflictNorth Central and NEBenue, Taraba, Nasarawa, Kaduna (S.), Plateau, Zamfara, Yobe and border LGAs; conflict-sensitive project design and dedicated mediation projects standard.
Security-Constrained ImplementationSE, SS, NEIPOB sit-at-home (all 5 SE states); banditry (Zamfara/Katsina/Sokoto/Kebbi); Boko Haram legacy (Borno/Yobe/Adamawa); security-adjusted scheduling explicit in design.
Biodiversity and ConservationCross River, Edo, ImoCross River Gorilla (~250-300 remaining; CRNP; Akamkpa); Okomu National Park (Edo); Oguta Lake (Imo; Flora Nwapa heritage); Obudu Mountain Resort (Cross River).
Post-Industrial DiversificationEnugu, Delta, BayelsaOji River and Udi coal LGAs (Enugu); Sapele SPML plywood heritage (Delta); Oloibiri post-oil (Bayelsa); dedicated economic diversification with limestone, industrial heritage tourism, and craft economy components.
Carnival and Tourism EconomyCross River, Edo, Lagos, OsunCalabar Carnival; Obudu Mountain Resort; Lagos entertainment economy; Osun-Osogbo UNESCO Grove; Benin City/EMOWAA; NTDC as standard partner across all major heritage tourism projects.

06  /  Institutional Architecture

Key Institutional Partners in the Compact

The following institutions appear as primary project partners across multiple states and zones. The Compact's evidence base and institutional architecture draw on this network.

Institution Full Name Scope Role in the Compact
NDDCNiger Delta Development Commission6 SS states; 123 LGAsCross-referenced in every oil LGA; primary accountability target
HYPREPHydrocarbon Pollution Remediation ProjectRivers (4 Ogoni LGAs)Primary project in Gokana, Khana, Eleme, Tai; UNEP 2011 implementation
NIFORNigerian Institute for Oil Palm ResearchSW, SE, SS statesOil palm rehabilitation partner in every palm oil LGA
RRINRubber Research Institute of NigeriaEdo, Delta, Cross River, Rivers, Ondo, Ogun, SWPrimary rubber rehabilitation partner; headquartered Edo
CRINCocoa Research Institute of NigeriaOgun, Ondo, Ekiti, Osun, Oyo, Kwara, Kogi, Cross RiverPrimary cocoa rehabilitation partner in all cocoa LGAs
WARDA/Africa RiceWest Africa Rice Development AssociationEbonyi, Kebbi, Niger, Taraba, Cross RiverPrimary rice value chain partner in rice-producing states
NTDCNigeria Tourism Development CorporationMultiple states nationwideStandard heritage tourism development partner throughout
NIMASANigerian Maritime Administration & Safety AgencyCoastal SS and SE LGAsFisheries development; maritime training; coastal safety
NESREANigerian Environmental Standards and Regulations AgencyAll oil and industrial LGAsPrimary environmental monitoring and remediation partner
CRNPCross River National ParkCross River (Akamkpa; Boki)Cross River Gorilla conservation; eco-tourism; community benefit
EMOWAAEdo Museum of West African ArtEdo (Oredo)Benin Bronzes repatriation; Adjaye Associates design; Legacy Restoration Trust
MOSOPMovement for the Survival of the Ogoni PeopleRivers (4 Ogoni LGAs)Primary community validation body for all Ogoni LGA projects
CBDACross River Basin Development AuthorityEbonyi, Cross RiverCross River Basin irrigation; rice production enhancement
ABUAhmadu Bello University ZariaKaduna (Zaria)Innovation hub; academic heritage; enterprise ecosystem
Igun GuildIgun Eronmwon bronze casting guildEdo (Oredo)UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage; 600-year bronze casting tradition

07  /  Historical Acknowledgement

Justice Projects — Historical Acknowledgement & Reparative Development

The Compact identifies eleven specific sites of historical injustice or ongoing justice deficit that require not just development investment but formal acknowledgement, reparation, or institutional accountability as a condition for genuine community development. These are justice obligations of the Nigerian state whose non-fulfilment structurally undermines development in the affected communities.

Justice Site / Case State / LGA Status Compact Treatment
Benin Bronzes Repatriation (1897 looting)Edo / OredoPartial returns underwayPrimary project 1 in Oredo; EMOWAA museum (Adjaye Associates); Igun Street guild conservation; British Museum Act constraint noted
Ken Saro-Wiwa and Ogoni 9 (executed 10 Nov 1995)Rivers / KhanaNo federal memorial; HYPREP very slowDedicated Ogoni 9 memorial in Bori; HYPREP acceleration as primary project in all 4 Ogoni LGAs; MOSOP as primary validation body; Shell $15.5M settlement noted as inadequate
UNEP 2011 Ogoniland Assessment (oil pollution)Rivers / 4 Ogoni LGAsHYPREP established 2016; very slow progressHYPREP full acceleration primary project in Gokana, Khana, Eleme, Tai; monthly water hydrocarbon testing mandatory; UNEP 2011 recommendations cited as accountability benchmark
Asaba Massacre (7 October 1967; 700–1,000 killed)Delta / Oshimili SouthNo federal recognition; inadequate memorialPrimary project 1 in Oshimili South; Federal Ministry of Culture AND Justice cited as responsible; formal federal recognition requirement
Oloibiri Reparations (first oil well 1956)Bayelsa / OgbiaOloibiri remains in extreme poverty; no reparationsHeritage and justice memorial as primary project; dedicated reparations programme; NNPC and Federal Ministry of Petroleum as responsible agencies
Iva Valley Massacre (18 November 1949; 21 miners killed)Enugu / Enugu NorthNo adequate memorial; incomplete labour history recognitionPrimary heritage project in Enugu North; NLC as partner; federal recognition via Ministry of Labour; Iva Valley as anchor for Coal City Heritage Tourism
Nembe Creek Trunkline Oil Spills (2008–2009; 2020)Bayelsa / Nembe~11,000 tonnes spilled; remediation grossly inadequateFull SPDC liability enforcement as primary project; NESREA and Amnesty International crosscheck; NDDC full audit escalated to National Assembly
Bakassi ICJ Resettlement (handover 2006–2008)Cross River / BakassiNew Bakassi resettlement inadequate; livelihoods lostFull resettlement audit and justice programme as primary project; Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs responsible; Nigeria-Cameroon Mixed Commission monitoring
Igbo-Ukwu Bronzes (international collections)Anambra / AguataSome objects in British Museum and other collectionsInternational collections repatriation advocacy as dedicated project; Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs; UNESCO; precedent of Benin Bronzes repatriation cited
Benin Bronzes — Igun Street Succession CrisisEdo / OredoUNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage; succession at riskDedicated guild conservation and apprenticeship project; export platform development; NAFDAC certification; NTDC marketing
Southern Kaduna Ethnic Violence (ongoing)Kaduna / Multiple LGAsRecurring violence; hundreds killed per cycleDedicated inter-ethnic mediation as primary project in 15+ Southern Kaduna LGAs; Kafanchan multi-ethnic reconciliation framework; separate community consultations before joint programming required

08  /  How It Works

Implementation: How the Compact Works

8.1
The Budget Advocacy Cycle

The Compact is designed to function in alignment with Nigeria's federal and state budget cycles. The 2027 and 2028 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Budget Call Circulars are the primary budget instruments through which community priorities documented in the Compact can be incorporated into appropriation bills.

At the federal level, the Compact supports engagement with the National Assembly's Appropriations Committees and the Finance Committee, with particular focus on NDDC appropriations (for South South LGAs), universal basic education and health funding (for all states), and the Federal Ministry of Culture's heritage and justice programmes. At the state level, each companion state document provides a detailed project list that state Budget Offices and Houses of Assembly can use as a citizens' demand document.

8.2
CoBAC Operating Protocol

Community Budget Accountability Committees operate at the LGA level with functional desks as specified in each LGA profile. The core CoBAC mandate is: obtain and publish all LGA budgets within 30 days of appropriation; photograph all project sites quarterly; cross-reference all NDDC and other federal agency allocations against delivery; conduct monthly water quality testing in oil-contaminated LGAs; and escalate all verified non-delivery cases to state Budget Monitoring and Price Intelligence Units, the National Assembly, and — where environmental or human rights violations are involved — to NESREA, NOSDRA, NUPRC, and international oversight bodies.

CoBAC is not a protest movement. It is an organised, professional, evidence-based accountability system whose primary tool is documentation, publication, and structured engagement with formal government accountability mechanisms. The Compact provides the roadmap; CoBAC provides the accountability.

8.3
Evidence Standards for Tracking

CoBAC monitoring must meet the same evidence standards applied in the Compact's needs assessment. Tracking reports must distinguish between VERIFIED (photographic evidence, official government data, independent surveys), Evidence-Informed Inference (consistent with available evidence but not directly verified), and Community Reported (community accounts requiring verification).

CoBAC must never claim delivery of projects it has not directly verified, and must explicitly flag Evidence Gap cases where government has not provided tracking data.

09  /  Closing Note

The Scope and the Stakes

The Citizens' Priority Projects Compact for Nigeria, 2027–2028 documents 775 community development realities across a country of more than 200 million people. From the millet-growing communities of Kebbi's Suru LGA to the fishing communities of Andoni on the Rivers State coast; from the bronze casters of Igun Street in Benin City to the banditry-affected farmers of Maru in Zamfara; from the displaced families of New Bakassi to the oil-contaminated communities of Ogoniland — the Compact holds these realities together in one document because they are together the lived reality of one country.

The Compact does not pretend that 9,500 priority projects will all be funded in two budget cycles. It does insist that every community's priorities have been documented with dignity, grounded in evidence, assigned to an accountable institution, and linked to a measurable indicator.

If governments deliver on half the projects, that is hundreds of thousands of Nigerians with clean water, functioning PHCs, rehabilitated schools, and income-generating processing hubs.

If governments fail to deliver, the Compact provides the documented baseline against which that failure can be named, published, and challenged.

What the Compact ultimately demonstrates is something the data has always shown but that development programmes have often obscured: Nigeria does not lack resources. It lacks accountable, community-grounded investment of the resources it has. The 2027–2028 budget cycles are an opportunity to change that. The Citizens' Priority Projects Compact is the citizens' contribution to making that change possible.

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