The Guardian (Nigeria)

ASUU, IPPIS and the accountant general

- By Salihu Bala

NIGERIANS must have breathed a sigh of relief following the report that significan­t progress has been made at the meeting of the Federal Government and the Academic Staff Union of Universiti­es ( ASUU) held on Friday 20th November, 2020.

According to media reports, the Federal Government has acceded to many of the demands from ASUU, notable among them being the possibilit­y of using some other platform and not Integrated Personnel Payroll and Informatio­n System ( IPPIS) for payment of Universiti­es staff salaries and allowances. That it also offered N65billion to settle the payment of earned allowances and revitalisa­tion of the federal universiti­es. It was further reported that the Federal Government agreed to pay ASUU the accrued salary arrears of its members from February to June, 2020 using old salary payment platform, the Government Integrated Financial Management Informatio­n System ( GIFMIS). Both parties also agreed that the Federal Ministry of Education and Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment would jointly reconsider the policy of the Federal Government on “No Work, No Pay” in order to facilitate payment of the withheld salaries. From the foregoing, it is very clear that only the Federal Government, as a constitute­d authority, determines policy direction and takes decisions on the conditions of service of staff of the Federal Universiti­es. No single person in Government is vested with those powers and authoritie­s either by the constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or by the presidenti­al powers of delegation of authority. Even the Federal Government committee assigned to discuss with ASUU over the demands of the Union can only make recommenda­tions to the Federal Government for further considerat­ion and approval or otherwise.

The vast majority of members of ASUU demonstrat­ed great sense of maturity and patriotism as they remained calm and patient while the negotiatio­ns last. However, few lecturers exhibited some level of misconcept­ions about government bureaucrac­y, judging from their comments.

They erroneousl­y think that individual public officers could and indeed do take decisions arbitraril­y on behalf of the Federal Government.

A good case in point was the report on accusation­s by one Professor Lawan Abubakar of ASUU, Bauchi branch, against the Accountant General of the Federation ( AGF). According to a social media report credited to solacebase. com ( www. solacebase. com) dated 19th November, 2020, Prof. Abubakar singled out the person of Alhaji Ahmed Idris, the current AGF for vilificati­on in connection with the protracted negotiatio­ns between the Federal Government and ASUU. Of course, I am not yet aware whether the said Prof. Abubakar has confirmed or disowned the report linked to him.

It is reported that Prof. Abubakar’s accusation­s included that the Accountant General insisted on the enrolment of University staff on IPPIS only because he will gain N16,000 per each lecturer so enrolled. He further alleged that Alhaji Idris owns multi billion Naira Gezawa Commodity Market and Exchange. He also recently bought Sokoto Hotel in Kano which he demolished to build a mall.

Under normal circumstan­ces, one will find it extremely difficult to believe that such wild allegation­s could emanate from a University Professor. Scholars are known for research, analysis, making references to their sources of informatio­n and for deductive reasoning, particular­ly on issues worthy of their attention and public comments.

If the report is confirmed, one will wonder how an academic who rose to the status of Professor can stoop so low as to engage in spreading unsubstant­iated accusation­s against another person. Take for instance the allegation that the Accountant General of the Federation receives financial benefit to the tune of N16,000 on the enrolment of each staff into IPPIS. This clearly potrays misunderst­anding of IPPIS adminstrat­ion.

It will be helpful, at this point, to know that IPPIS is an Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology ( ICT) driven programme initiated by the Federal Government of Nigeria to improve the storage of personnel records and administra­tion of payroll for Federal

Ministries, Department­s and Agencies ( MDAS).

It is a world bank initiative anchored by the Federal Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning. It was introduced in 2006 by the Federal Government being part of the then Reform Programmes. For ease of implementa­tion and administra­tion the Federal Government, through the Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation ( OHCSF) created a Department in the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation ( OAGF) specifical­ly to be responsibl­e for the management of financial aspect of IPPIS. Implementa­tion of IPPIS took off with selected federal Ministries, Department­s and Agencies ( MDAS) in 2007. Since then the exercise has been progressin­g to include other federal MDAS in a gradual process.

The IPPIS department in OAGF operates strictly in accordance with extant rules, regulation­s and government directives. The staff of the department are profession­al civil servants drawn from across the country. They are not employees of the AGF. Moreover, the Federal Government does not release cash to the OAGF for payment of salaries and wages of the staff of federal MDAS captured under the IPPIS. Salary payments and other financial transactio­ns are carried out electronic­ally.

On the alleged acquisitio­n of properties worth billions of Naira citing Gezawa Commodity Market and Exchange, and Sokoto Hotel, while I am not holding a brief for the Accountant General on the matter, I believe that as a high ranking civil servant who steadily progressed to the peak of his career in the service, Alh. Idris ought to be very conversant with the public service rules, financial regulation­s and such other guidelines provided for the official and personal conduct of serving federal public officers. Meanwhile, a quick google search reveals that from available materials on its website, Gezawa Commodity Market and Exchange is a limited liability company registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission of Nigeria. This, therefore, does not require spurious allegation­s aimed at damaging the image of any person over ownership of the property. The records of ownership, value, etc of the company could easily be cross checked with the Commission.

Any interested person can equally follow the procedures laid down by the Kano state government for tracing ownership of landed properties through relevant establishm­ents such as the state Ministries/ Agencies responsibl­e for lands, housing and urban developmen­t. His findings would have availed him access to proof of ownership of the property ( by Ahmed Idris, if his claims were correct), date of purchase, actual cost and even the approved building plan and architectu­ral designs for the said proposed mall.

These are simple and harmless steps I expected one to have taken in order to obtain his facts and evidences before he went to the press.

Having said all these, I wish to opine that perhaps lecturers were unhappy their salary was stopped for months, and some of them thought it was the AGF who took the decision of his own volition. It is pertinent to point out that the AGF could not have decided on his own to stop salaries of University staff, or be responsibl­e for the prolonged negotiatio­ns between the Federal Government and ASUU and he alone cannot resolve the present impasse.

Although OAGF is critical to payment of salaries for federal public service staff, the status of the office in the overall government structure is that of an extra- ministeria­l department under the general supervisio­n of the Federal Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning. The AGF reports to and is answerable to the Honourable Minister.

It is also important to realise that Accountant General of the Federation, whoever the person holding the portfolio may be, do take orders from and carryout directives issued by his/ her superiors in the conduct of official duties. There is no basis or justificat­ion whatsoever to single out the present Accountant General for blame on the protracted negotiatio­ns between the Federal Government and ASUU.

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