Public workers under the aegis of
the Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria have called on President
Muhammadu Buhari to reverse all the alleged illegal recruitments conducted
during the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.
Warning that they may go on strike
over the matter, the union also demanded an increase in their salaries because
of “the declining value of the naira.”
The workers alleged that over 500
persons loyals to Jonathan’s aides and cronies were injected into the civil
service in the last days of the administration.
They were said to have been deployed
to senior officers’ positions, starting from assistant directors upward.
In a statement issued on Wednesday
after the National Executive Council meeting in Kaduna, President of ASCSN, Mr.
Bobboi Bala Kaigama and Secretary-General, Mr. Alade Lawal, said upsurge in
arbitrariness and bias in the way and manner the Federal Civil Service
Commission carried out its oversight functions in the name of recruitment was
becoming worrisome.
The statemenr said while cases of
illegal recruitments into the service had continued to rise, the FCSC had
allegedly destroyed the recruitment process into the civil service on the
flimsy excuse of acting on the directive from higher quarters to grant waivers
to some states.
He said, “Our take is that the
commission cannot continue to hide under the guise of spurious waivers for some
disadvantaged states to import and impose unqualified and incompetent persons
into the federal public service over and above qualified serving officers.
“Cases abound in the service of some
officers who were appointed to positions without the requisite qualifications,
as provided for in the scheme of service, FCSC guidelines on appointment,
promotion and discipline, public service rules and establishment circulars.
Graduates with eight to 12 years post-graduation experience are being appointed
as directors. It is as bad as that.
“We have made our case known to the
commission and the Presidency on this vexed issue and we are still waiting for
a reversal of all illegal recruitments made in the past five years in order to
return sanity into the system. We make bold to say that if the reversal is not
effected as being demanded, the ASCSN will have no alternative than to adopt
other trade union measures to seek redress.”
On pay increase, ASCSN said that
although no amount had been fixed, the organised labour movement, including the
Trade Union Congress of Nigeria and the Nigeria Labour Congress, had set up two
committees to determine the percentage.
Continuing, the group said: “What we
collect as salaries can no longer take us to the bus stop, let alone take us
home. We have endured for so long and it is time for the government to look
into our direction.
“We are, therefore, calling on the
Federal Government to enter into negotiation with labour with a view to
creating a new salary regime that will be realistic enough to improve the quality
of lives of workers and at the same time bridge the salary gap between the core
civil service and other sub-sectors of the federal public service,”
The TUC, he said, had not resolved
on the amount, but had been receiving submissions on it from its affiliated
unions.
He said, “The TUC will collect
theirs and the NLC will collect theirs. We will then come together and
harmonise our positions and come up with one demand that we will present to the
government because the salaries review are long overdue. It is supposed to be
after five years; we are in the sixth year.”

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