As the country’s financial crisis deepens
as a result of the oil slump, governors have taken the need to block
all revenue leakages more seriously now than ever and have declared war
on ghost workers and pensioners in their states.
Worried about the difficulty in paying
workers’ salaries, the governors have resolved to weed out ghost workers
and dead pensioners who are believed to be costing their states several
millions of Naira.
The Kwara State Governor, Alhaji
Abdulfatah Ahmed, confirmed that the issue of ghost workers is posing a
serious challenge his administration.
He said the state government was planning a biometric verification of the state workforce.
According to him, the verification will
involve a thorough assessment and authentication of academic
certificates of the workers to enable him to eliminate cases of ghost
workers in the system.
Ahmed’s Senior Special Assistant on Media
and Communication, Dr. Muyideen Akorede, who spoke to one of our
correspondents on Thursday in Ilorin, said the planned verification was a
follow-up to that of the local government workers conducted in 2012.
“The state government is currently reviewing the plans, including the cost of the proposed exercise,” Akorede said.
Findings revealed that the Enugu State government has also moved to fish out ghost workers and pensioners on its payroll.
The development followed the drastic decline in the state’s allocations from the federation account.
The state governor, Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi,
recently inaugurated an 11-man audit committee to verify the number of
staff and pensioners in the state.
The committee was mandated to ascertain
the staff strength of local government councils in the state and
investigate why some of the councils could not pay their workers’
salaries.
The committee, which was given two months
to submit its report, is headed by the Speaker of the state House of
Assembly, Mr. Edward Ubosi.
Apart from intensifying effort to fish
out ghost workers from the state’s payroll, the Niger State Governor,
Alhaji Abubakar Bello, has set up a committee charged with the
responsibility of merging ministries and agencies.
The Chief Press Secretary to the
Governor, Ibraheem Dooba, told one of our correspondents that the
committee would look into rationalisation and merging of ministries and
agencies.
Dooba said, “The committee’s mandates
include identifying leakages through which public fund is being
siphoned. The committee is expected to submit its report in September.”
Also, the Permanent Secretary, the state
Pension Board, Alhaji Alhmed Yahaya, urged pensioners in the state to
submit themselves for biometric verification to enable the board to know
how many retirees are still alive or dead.
“The verification will help to check ghost pensioners in the state,” Yahaya said.
While describing the workforce in the
state as over bloated, the Bauchi State Head of Service, Mr. Abdon Gin,
said the state government did not know the exact number of ghost workers
on its payroll.
Like its counterparts, the Bauchi State
Government had also set up a committee to authenticate the exact number
of workers on its payroll.
Gin said, “The state government is
working hard to sanitise the workforce through the ongoing verification.
There is over-bloated workforce of over 35, 000 civil servants and wage
bill of over N2.3bn in the state.
“As soon as we finish the verification, the number of civil servants and their salaries will drop.”
The state governor, Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar, said the verification was being carried out at no cost.
The Nigeria Labour Congress in Osun State
pushed for the verification of the state workforce following a claim by
the state government that it pays the 35,000 workers on its payroll
N3.6bn every month.
NLC Chairman in the state, Mr. Jacob
Adekomi, had during a summit organised by members of the state House of
Assembly, faulted the government’s claim.
One of our correspondents learnt that the
ongoing staff audit in the state led to some startling discoveries as
many fictitious names were allegedly found on the payroll of some
government agencies.
The Head of Service in the state, Mr.
Sunday Owoeye, also confirmed that government had started screening
workers and pensioners to ascertain their number.
The Kogi State Government, which said it
had eliminated ghost workers in its workforce in 2013, had also embarked
on the verification of pensioners in the state.
The Commissioner for Information, Mrs.
Zainab Okino, who disclosed this to one of our correspondents, said,
“The issue of ghost workers does not arise now because cases of ghost
workers were eliminated in Kogi State in 2013 but another verification
of pensioners is ongoing.”
The recent verification of civil servants in Ekiti State indicated that no fewer than 809 ghost workers were detected.
The state governor, Mr. Ayodele Fayose,
while featuring on the monthly radio and television programme, tagged
“Meet Your Governor” said a total of 49,066 had so far been screened out
of which 48,257 were verified.
The state had also set up a committee to
review the outcome of the recent verification of workers on the state
government’s payroll to detect those being overpaid among others.
The committee, headed by the Deputy
Governor, Dr. Olusola Kolapo, is also to compile the list of dead
workers still on the payroll, those not due for study leave but were
granted and still being paid, and those who absconded from their duty
posts, among others.
The Abia State Head of Service, Dr.
Vivian Umah, said that the state government had saved about N150m
through the introduction of biometric verification of workers.
Umah said Governor Okezie Ikpeazu
introduced compulsory biometric verification of all workers as a measure
to checkmate ghost workers’ syndrome.
He said that the governor had set up a
team headed by his Economic Adviser, Mr. Obinna Oriaku, to oversee the
exercise, adding that since the measure was introduced, the menace had
drastically reduced in the state.
The Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, Mr. Godwin Adindu, said there was no going back on the biometric staff audit.
The ongoing verification of workers in Ondo State led to the discovery of many ghost workers.
The state Commissioner for Information,
Mr. Kayode Akinmade, who could not give the exact number of the
discovered ghost workers, said, “We have not collated all the data and
the exercise is still ongoing. We are still going to do the verification
in all government parastatals and agencies as well as the pension board
after the core civil service. But I am sure we have discovered many of
them.”

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