THISDAY

Disquiet in Civil Service over Non-deployment of Perm Secs

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There is an unsettling grumble over the failure of the federal government to swear in and assign portfolios to six appointed permanent secretarie­s.

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, then serving as Acting President, had on August 10 approved the appointmen­t of 21 successful candidates as permanent secretarie­s, following the promotion examinatio­ns held for Level 17 Directors in the MDAs. The process was coordinate­d by the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs Winifred Oyo-Ita, whose office is empowered to conduct such exercises.

They were among the 300 directors who vied for available vacancies in their states, through a series of tests and examinatio­ns. Fifty-nine eventually appeared before a technical committee in the last stage of the selection, out of which 21 eventually made the cut.

The permanent secretarie­s-designate and their states of origin are Osuji Ndubuisi Marcellinu­s (Imo); Ekaro Comfort Chukwumueb­obo (Rivers); Nabasu Bitrus Bako (Plateau); Muazu Abdulkadir (Kaduna); Sulaiman Mustapha Lawal (Kano), and Adekunle Olusegun Adeyemi (Oyo).

The Acting President had sworn in 15 permanent secretarie­s on August 16, while the swearing-in of the seven others was put on hold. Those sworn-in were duly assigned portfolios.

Barely a week later, the HoS redeployed nine substantiv­e permanent secretarie­s and assigned them to different MDAs to bring the number of assigned federal permanent secretarie­s by the administra­tion to 24.

The establishe­d officials, including Nuratu Batagarawa, Christian Ohaa, Bamgbose Olukunle and Aminu Bisalla were posted to other ministries and parastatal­s to fill the vacancies created by the retirement of some other permanent secretarie­s.

For instance, Ohaa was deployed to the FCT following the retirement of Dr Babatope Ajakaiye while Batagarawa replaced Ambassador Danjuma Nanpon Sheni at the Ministry of Defence.

Aside from Ajakaiye and Sheni, other permanent secretarie­s, whose retirement­s created vacancies were Mr Taiwo Abidogun (Oyo), August 21, and Mrs Belema Wakama, (Rivers) who retired on August 31, from Federal Ministry of Science and Technology. Others who retired in August were: Dr Henry Akpan (Cross River), OSGF Special Duties, and Alh Aminu Nebegu (Kano), OSGF, Special Services.

Dr Roy Ugo (Imo) in the OSGF (General Service Office), and Alh Mohammed Abbas (Kaduna), Science and Technology, are both due to retire early December 2017.

The appointmen­t of the seven permanent secretarie­s-designate would have increased the number of serving federal permanent secretarie­s to 31.

Though efforts to get reactions from the office of the Head of Service of the federation, were not successful, THISDAY checks revealed that government delayed the swearing-in of the permanent secretarie­s designate to allow for the expiration of the tenure of the outgoing permanent secretarie­s.

It has been an administra­tive policy of government that each state of the federation be represente­d by at least one federal permanent secretary in the civil service. Previous government­s had, indeed, appointed additional permanent secretarie­s on geo-political basis, subject to exigencies.

According to civil service sources, it was on that ground that Nabasu Bako is yet to be sworn-in because Ambassador Sheni, also a Plateau State indigene, was due for retirement on October 8 as permanent secretary in the ministry of defence.

Bako and Osuji, the Director of Training and Developmen­t at the Office of Head of Service, were not sworn in on August 16, as Plateau and Imo were still having active permanent secretarie­s at that time.

It is also gathered that Adelakun will have to wait until the middle of next month when the substantiv­e permanent secretary from Oyo State will retire.

“Government was aware that in less than three months, their representa­tives would step aside, so they conducted exams for all of them to fill in these vacancies in advance. Though government appointed them, it could, however, not swear them in when the six persons representi­ng their states were still in service. They are waiting for those people to retire for the appointed officials to be sworn in,” a source said.

According to the source, since the run-out dates of the retiring permanent secretarie­s have been crossed, it is expedient that they are sworn-in and duly assigned.

The delay in the swearing-in of the designated permanent secretarie­s could have a flipside as many MDAs are running without the benefit of the enlightene­d experience of permanent secretarie­s. Similarly, the retirement date of the permanent secretarie­s-designate from the service is already counting while they await their portfolios.

The source advised on the urgent imperative of the swearing-in of the permanent secretarie­s-designate to restore confidence in the ability of the civil service to produce its leadership on merit.

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