Daily Trust

That workers sack in Niger State

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The Niger State government recently through the state Civil Service Commission said it has sacked no fewer than 754 civil servants from its payroll. The government clarified that out of the figure, 380 were compulsori­ly retired while 374 others were dismissed. Those dismissed were found to have violated extant Civil Service rules bordering on salary inflation, employment racketeeri­ng, pension fraud, age falsificat­ion and certificat­e forgery.

The Civil Service is the machinery that implements government’s programmes while the civil servants are the operators of such machinery who must ignite the flames of competence, dignity, immense skills and integrity in line with the government’s policy direction.

A civil service occupied by certificat­e forgers, corrupt and questionab­le characters is far from actualisin­g the government’s peopleorie­nted programmes. In this light, the state government’s decision is arguably reasonable.

Although it generated disquiet from certain publics on the basis that it would further worsen the unemployme­nt rate and discomfort lives which is also well-founded, the government’s action to promote 6,835 and additional recruitmen­t of 1,133 from 2016 to date was sensitive and through and through.

The state council of the NLC also deserves some credit for the caution, restraint and maturity exercised even as it expressed strong resolve to pursue the rights of its members with ‘genuine complaints’ without causing industrial disharmony, sideshows and distractio­ns.

Nonetheles­s,

the

state government must take further steps to extend its long arm against those in the top cadres of the civil service who engage in similar acts of misconduct in order to prove that the dictum ‘no sacred cow’ is real. A situation where certain directors and permanent secretarie­s, who have reached their retirement age are still in their offices and drawing humongous salaries that could pay many new workforce is ‘white-collar banditry’ and avoidable drain on state’s purse.

Going forward, government­s at all levels must commit reasonable resources to employ technologi­cal tools that will automatica­lly de-list workers who have clocked retirement from its payroll; detect “would-be” civil servants with fake certificat­es during recruitmen­t processes before issuance of appointmen­t letters because dismissal many years into the service on these grounds is not always pleasant.

Additional­ly, the state government should expedite actions to fill the vacancies in the critical areas of state needs before some unpatrioti­c few in the service use the available spaces to funnel illegal salaries into their pockets. Also, in filling the about 6,000 vacancies from which the governor’s CPS disclosed that over 5,000 are from voluntary retirement­s, the government through the state Civil Service Commission must ensure transparen­t and fair processes for the best, youthful qualified candidates to emerge. It must try to resist undue pressures from those desperate politician­s that have incorporat­ed whitecolla­r job slots into their constituen­cy projects for political capital.

Muhammad Danjuma Abubakar resides in Minna

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