The Federal Government and 10 other states lost
over N538bn to thousands of ghost workers in the last five years,
investigations by Saturday PUNCH have revealed.
Of the amount, the Federal Government paid N220bn to 103,000 ghost workers between September 2013 and May 2015.
The
remaining N318bn was paid by 10 states of the federation. The states
are Katisna, N30bn; Kano, N17bn; Rivers, N60; Benue, N10.2bn; Oyo,
N18bn; Abia, N26.5bn; Adamawa, N20.4bn; Akwa-Ibom, N15bn; Bayelsa,
N120bn and Ekiti, N1.2bn.
A breakdown of the amount showed that the
sum of N170bn involving 60,000 ghost workers was
saved during the
administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, while the balance
of N50bn, involving 43,000 ghost workers, was saved between February and
May this year.
The sum of N45bn was saved between September 2013
and May 2015 when Jonathan’s administration implemented the Integrated
Personnel Payroll and Information System.
The IPPIS scheme is one
of the Federal Government’s initiatives designed to undertake human
resource management activities from recruitment to separation, including
payroll and pension processing.
It also facilitates planning,
aids budgeting, monitors monthly payment of staff emoluments against
what was provided for in the budget; ensures database integrity;
facilitates easy storage; updating and retrieval of personnel records
for administrative and pension processes.
The immediate past
Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, had said that those using
ghost workers to steal from the government payroll had been referred to
the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission
for further investigation and possible prosecution.
She had said, “60,000 ghost workers were weeded out, which saved government about N170bn.
“The
ministry wrote to ICPC to trace those that needed to be held
accountable and we are ready to assist ICPC on any issue that borders on
transparency.”
In the same vein, the current Finance Minister
recently constituted a Continuous Audit Team headed by Mr. Mohammed
Dikwa to audit the payroll of the government.
Few months into the
assignment, Dikwa told the finance minister that 43,000 ghost workers
had been removed from government payroll.
Dikwa had said, “Let me
say that since we started the continuous audit programme, we have saved
about N50bn and over 43,000 ghost workers have been removed from the
payroll of the federal government.”
The Rivers State Government
has said that some of the ghost workers recently discovered in the state
have begun to return funds illegally collected as salaries.
The action by the ghost workers, according to a source, was aimed at avoiding being prosecuted by the state government.
The
Commissioner for Information and Communications, Dr. Austin Tam-George,
said the state government had recovered over N1bn per month through its
renewed campaign against ghost workers.
Tam-George told Saturday PUNCH that about 2,000 ghost workers had also been identified.
He
explained that the state Governor, Nyesom Wike, through the
identification of Bank Verification Numbers of civil servants, fished
out the ghost workers.
Saturday PUNCH also learnt that the Oyo State Government saved about N300m after workers’ verification exercise.
A
senior government official said the panel set up to investigate workers
allegedly collecting multiple salaries were still working.
The
state Governor, Abiola Ajimobi, had said on a radio programme that those
involved in the fraudulent practice would be charged to court.
The
source told our correspondent that one of the workers involved was
drawing nine salaries, while another was receiving 11 salaries. He said
arrests had already been made, but details had yet to be made public.
On
May 11, the media team of the state government released a statement
claiming that the state had temporarily expunged the names of 16,532
workers and pensioners from its payroll following their alleged
involvement in collection of multiple salaries, falsification of
retirement age and other infractions.
The Bayelsa State Governor,
Mr. Seriake Dickson, said on May 17, 2016 on a television programme
that the state lost about N24bn yearly to the activities of payroll
frauds.
The payroll frauds, Dickson claimed, connived with some financial institutions to defraud the government.
Ekiti
State Government also discovered it had been losing over N17m monthly
to ghost workers after a verification of the state civil servants was
carried out last year.
A top government official told Saturday PUNCH on Friday that about 307 ghost workers were discovered during the exercise.
This means that Ekiti State lost N204m in a year and N1.02bn in five years to ghost workers.
This
figure is aside from the N155.7m the state lost in two years to 1,154
civil servants collecting more than their actual salaries, according to
an interim report by the state’s Teaching Service Commission.
The
Katsina State Governor, Aminu Masari, said recently that his government
detected names of children and wives of some prominent persons on the
payroll of local government areas in the state.
He added the state could now save about N500m monthly after flushing out the ghost workers.
Katsina State loses N6bn annually and lost N30bn in the past five years to ghost workers.
The Kano State Government also discovered 7,629 ghost workers after a biometric verification of its workforce.
The
state Head of Service, Muhammad Na’iya, said following the discovery,
the state would now save over N283.5m monthly from paying the ghost
workers.
In Benue State, Governor Samuel Ortom said a report by a
biometric audit consultant showed that over N170m was being spent by
the state government as salaries to 14,000 ghost workers every month.
This means the state government has been spending over N2.04bn monthly
on the ghost workers and N10.2bn in the last five years.
On June
13, 2016, the Abia State Commissioner for Finance, Mr. Obinna Oriaku,
revealed that the state uncovered no fewer than 1,800 ghost workers
after a biometric verification exercise.
He said with the exercise, the state had succeeded in reducing its monthly wage bill from N1.5bn to N1.0 57bn.
The Adamawa State Government uncovered 12,609 ghost workers in the state’s local government payroll.
The
Chairman of the Local Government Staff Verification Committee in the
state, Mr. Maurice Vunobolki, disclosed that 12,609 ghost workers had
cost the state a monthly wage bill of N341m N4.1bn annually.
In
March 2016, the Akwa Ibom State Government embarked on a programme to
identify and eliminate ghost workers from its civil service.
The
Commissioner for Finance in the state, Mr. Akan Okon, said the
government was conducting staff audit to ensure the success of the
exercise.
“We are tying our payroll system to the BVN and the
outcome is certainly going to help to reduce the issue of ghost workers
in the state,” he said.
Many governors have initiated moves to weed out ghost workers from their payrolls to reduce the heavy wage bill burden on them.
Most
states owe their workers several months of salary arrears as a result
of the dwindling Federal allocations caused by the global oil slump.
While
some states have concluded biometric verification exercises and have
identified ghost workers in their thousands, civil servants are
currently undergoing verification in many other states.
The Niger
State Government said the screening exercise it initiated was ongoing
and that it would go a long way to fish out ghost workers at the state
and local government levels.
The Senior Special Assistant on
Media to the Governor, Mr. Jide Orintunsin, told Saturday PUNCH that it
would be difficult to give the exact figure of ghost workers in the
state until the exercise was completed
Orintunsin confirmed that some amount had been saved from the verification exercise.
He
said, “No doubt some amount must have been saved from the exercise. The
amount of the money saved will be made known to the public.”
Civil servants in Imo and Enugu states are also undergoing verification in a bid to fish out ghost workers among them.
The
Imo State Head of Service, Mr. Callistus Ekenze, told one of our
correspondents that the state government would announce the amount of
the money saved after the verification.
Ekenze said, “It
(verification) is on course and has not been concluded. It is when we
discover the number of ghost workers that we will know the amount of
money the government has saved.”
In Enugu State, Saturday PUNCH
learnt that workers and political appointees were required to appear
before the verification team at the Old Governor’s Lodge in the state
capital for verification.
The Kwara State Governor, Alhaji
Abdulfatah Ahmed, in an interview with one of our correspondents,
explained why his state embarked on the verification exercise.
When
asked what informed his decision to carry out verification before
salaries are paid? Ahmed said, “Naturally, when you are faced with the
kind of challenges we are facing as a country and as a state whereby
your revenue is seriously reduced, the first thing you do is to cut your
cost and what cost are we looking at?
“The cost of running
governance, overhead cost and personal cost and we are all aware that we
have had series of over bloated database for our various workforces.
So, it is only normal for us to come up with a data that will suit the
desired database.
“Those who have been verified have been asked
to be paid. If anyone has any outstanding remittance, it is probably
there are one or two areas required to ensure that you are duly desired
to be enumerated. We are still working on it because it is more than
just going through the biometrics. You see, this abnormality has been
going on for a period of 15, 20, 30 years. So, you can’t just get it
cleared up in one fell swoop programme.
“Verification will
eliminate the first level then, you still have to go into document
verification, which is the next level and it is not something to be done
almost immediately. You will be carrying it on as the programme is
moving on.”
Source: The Punch
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