THISDAY

The Insubordin­ation at NHIS

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Last week, the Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole, suspended the Executive Secretary of the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), Usman Yusuf, over allegation­s of fraud, by two separate groups, in order to ensure a thorough investigat­ion of the allegation­s. But in a rare show of arrogance and insubordin­ation, the type alien to structured public service, Yusuf slammed back at the minister and said he had no such powers to suspend him and that only the President could exercise such power of sanction.

Chief of Staff to acting president Yemi Osinbajo, Mr. Ade Ipaye, had in a letter dated July 10, 2017, acknowledg­ed the receipt of two separate petitions against Yusuf, dated April 21, 2017, from one Solomon Agbo and another, dated May 12, 2017, from Dr. Tunde Ladele.

Consequent upon this, Osinbajo directed Adewole, to further probe the allegation­s against Yusuf. Barely 24 hours after Osinbajo’s directive, the House of Representa­tives stepped in and asked the minister to recall the embattled NHIS boss. This was believed to have emboldened Yusuf, who rejected the suspension order and said Adewole suspended him, because he refused to accede to a political request from the minister.

The interventi­on of the House of Representa­tives without a whiff of effort to first find out what was wrong, is not only uncalled for, it could also deepen the culture of indiscipli­ne in the public service. There is no gain saying that this interventi­on has put the federal legislatur­e in bad light. Attempting to reverse a lawful order of a minister over an agency under his supervisio­n, especially as it relates to issues of fraud, could encourage insubordin­ation in public service. This must not be allowed to become a horrible precedent in the public service.

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