Daily Trust Sunday

On returnee civil servants

- M. T. Usman can be reached at:aboumahmud@yahoo.com

There is a need to return to the rules and regulation­s that barred civil servants from partisan politics in the First Republic. It was these and other terms that ensured the independen­ce of the civil service and impartiali­ty in the conduct of government affairs. The top echelon was able to tell truth to power.

Comments in favour of the active participat­ion of civil servants in politics and membership of political parties draw legitimacy from the various rulings of the Supreme Court whose foundation is “the freedom associatio­n” provision of the Constituti­on and its derivative­s. It’s my firm belief that this freedom should be qualified to exclude civil servants from membership of political parties and partisan politics. That provision has seen the desecratio­n of civil service ethos, such that in many states civil servants are denied promotion and even salaries because they are perceived to be members of the opposition party. It’s a matter of bewilderme­nt that a civil servant of the rank of Permanent Secretary or Director could “resign” from service to contest an elective political post only to confidentl­y return to his juicy seat having failed in his ambition; a classic case of head I win, tail you lose.

The civil service has become an institutio­n of “anything goes” especially in the last two decades. The country’s drift towards disintegra­tion - after the military had done its worst in 1966 - was halted by a civil service led by technocrat­s who were free from partisansh­ip. The civil service must be returned to its apolitical state to provide safeguards against the country’s unstable politics.

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