Daily Trust

2 months after elections, Customs officers yet to get allowances

- By Usman Bello Balarabe

Officers of the Nigerian Customs Service have expressed dissatisfa­ction over the non-payment of their election allowances, two months after the 2023 general elections.

The officers include Customs Assistants, Assistant Inspector of Customs, Inspector of Customs, Assistant Superinten­dent of Customs, Deputy Superinten­dent of Customs, Superinten­dent of Customs as well as Chief Superinten­dent Customs officers who were deployed across the country to complement the strength of the Nigeria Police Force during the elections.

Daily Trust reports that some personnel of the Nigeria Immigratio­n Service (NIS) had made similar complaints in March, even though investigat­ions revealed that some of them were later paid last month.

A document dated

February 8, 2023 and signed by M AbbaKura, Acting Deputy Comptrolle­r-General (E, I&I) for the Comptrolle­rGeneral of Customs titled: ‘Re: Forwarding List of Officers Deployed for 2023 General Election Duties,’ contained a list of 3,138 Custom officers posted for election duty across the country.

The list of deployment showed Kano State had the highest deployment of 242 Customs officers deployed for the exercise; Abuja, 178; Kaduna, 174; Bauchi, 146 and Katsina,143/.

Two inspectors of Customs were deployed to Abuja, two others deployed to Bauchi and Katsina States and one assistant superinten­dent of Customs deployed to Ogun State confirmed that they had not received their allowances.

A deputy superinten­dent of Customs deployed to Kano State also expressed dissatisfa­ction with the delay in payment of their election allowances. “We still do not know what happened to our election allowances. It is almost two months now but we have not received any amount, and I can confidentl­y tell you I have not heard of any custom officer that has received the allowance,” he said.

In Ogun State, an assistant superinten­dent of Customs said though they had not been informed of how much they were entitled to, regardless of rankings, some officers had lost hope of being paid.

Reacting, the spokesman of the Nigeria Customs Service through its spokespers­on, Abdullahi Aliyu Maiwada, confirmed the nonpayment of election allowances to over 3,000 officers across the country.

Maiwada said although the service was not responsibl­e for the payment of election dues, efforts had been initiated to resolve the issue.

He, however, provided no explanatio­n on who is responsibl­e for the payment and delay, but stressed that the issue would be resolved as soon as practicall­y possible.

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