Tag: KOGI

  • Kogi battles ghost workers

    Kogi battles ghost workers

    Kogi State has uncovered over 25,000 ghost workers, and vows to fish out more, reports JOSEPH JIBUEZE

    Over 25,000 ghost workers in Kogi State have met their tether’s end. Some of these dubious elements were said to have been defrauding the state for as long as 10 years. Now the state, in an ambitious move, has ensured that they no longer drain the resources of the state.

    The ghost-worker menace is a nationwide malaise, which President Muhammadu Buhari wants the Continuous Audit Team to tackle, alongside overpayment of allowances and outright embezzlement.

    In June, the team found discrepancies in the payroll of ministries, departments and agencies, which cost the Federal Government about N5.7billion monthly.

    Its head, Mohammed Dikwa, said the team has helped save about N50billion, adding that over 43,000 ghost workers have been struck off the payroll.

    Most states are also affected. For instance, Plateau uncovered 5,000 ghost workers recently, while Sokoto uncovered 12,915 two weeks ago. With resources getting leaner and federal allocations dwindling, resulting in inability to pay salaries, more states are embarking on staff audit to eliminate fraudulent salary earners.

    On assumption of office, Governor Yahaya Bello, in line with his civil service reform policy, set up the Staff Verification and Screening Committee on February 22.

    Its mandate was to ascertain the true position of the state and local government workforce with a view to optimising Kogi’s human and financial resources for development.

    The committee’s leadership was later reshuffled following reports that it was sabotaging the exercise. A backup committee was further set up on May 24 and tasked with supporting the main committee to restore discipline, integrity and transparency to the screening exercise. On June 22, the committee submitted its report to the governor.

    It uncovered 25,103 ghost workers, as well as cases of impersonation of dead workers by staff who earned the deceased’s salaries.

    The report, presented to Governor Bello by the Auditor-General, Alhaji Usman Yusuf Okala, says those on the state’s payroll have been reduced following the exercise.

     

    The findings

    According to the report, as at February 22, the state had 88, 973 staff on its nominal payroll, with a monthly wage bill of N5,809,578,703. At the conclusion of the exercise on July 24, the cleared and validated workforce was 63,870.

    The 25,103 staff included unintended beneficiaries who had been drawing salaries fraudulently from the state and Local Government finances. “The estimated current monthly wage bills of cleared and validated workforce after the conclusion of our report was N4,443,070,644,” Okala said.

    According to him, the state lost over N213billion in the last 13 years to ghost workers but would save over N1.4billion on a monthly basis, which would have gone to ghost workers, thanks to the verification.  “These savings will amount to N16,387,296,713.88 per annum,” he added.

    On cases of impersonation, the report says: “These are set of dubious and notorious people who are claiming the employment benefits (salary & allowances) of some deceased civil servants of the state and Local Governments for as far back as 10 years.

    “Unfortunately, no single civil servant has raised alarm to put a stop to this practice, hence aiding and abetting the financial crime. A case in point is that of Joseph Inikpi, an employee of Dekina Local Government who we confirmed to be dead. Our findings further revealed that upon the death of Joseph Inikpi, a woman inherited her identity and began to enjoy her entitlements.

    “This first woman subsequently transferred the benefit of late Inikpi to another woman who is currently again enjoying the benefits of late Inikpi. The first woman (now in Abuja) who inherited late Inikpi identity is the one with her passport photograph on the Employee Biodata Form whereas the second woman (now in Dekina) currently enjoying the benefits of late Inikpi is the one whose phone number is on the Employee Biodata Form.”

    The screening committee also discovered double and multiple employments. The report says: “These are wicked people and officers within the state who draw salaries in multiple from either both state, local and Federal Government as well as private companies.

    “The numbers of employees in the employment of State & Local Governments in this category are 114. This discovery was revealed through interfacing with NIBSS where the BVN of the individuals concerns revealed they were earning salaries from more than one source.”

    It was also observed that the Local Government Education Authority (LGEA) had an over-bloated workforce, with several redundant senior officers ranging from GL12 to GL 17 who had left classroom for offices, thereby leaving the school without experienced teachers.

    The officers, the report says, were employed as professional class teachers but decided to abandon their teaching profession to LGEA offices where there was no work to do.

    The committee found a case where some were employment before the Kogi was created, contrary to what is contained in their employment letters.

    The reports says: “This people were employed by State Universal Basic Education Board SUBEB in 1986 as teachers in Ofu LGA. Please note that Kogi State was created in August 27, 1991. The letterhead paper used for their employment between 1983 to 1991 was that of Kogi State Government, Lokoja. How this was possible is still a mystery.”

    There were also age discrepancies. A worker was said to have been employed on July 9, 2008 by Ankpa LGEA whereas she was born on May 7, 1996. By implication, she was employed at the age of 12.

    “She has no primary school certificate, finished SSCE in June 2014 by her records available with us,” the report found.

    Also discovered were diaspora workers. The report says: “These are set of people who claimed to be in the employment of Kogi State Government, being paid salaries but are residing outside Kogi and even outside the country.

    “We described these categories of people as diaspora workers because almost all withdrawals of the proceeds of their illegal salaries are made in locations outside Kogi State for several years.”

     

    Verification challenges

    According to Okala, the field work was extensive and thorough; the integrity of data tested very high, but not without challenges.

    “The second aspect of the Committee’s work, which is desk review, was marred with substantial fraud and high level of irregularities. It appears that these irregularities were deliberate effort by some enemies of the state who may have infiltrated the screening committee to manipulate and embarrass the state government and, by extension, the state governor for their selfish interest,” he said.

    The report says the cleared list is not 100 percent clean as “it might still harbour some potential illegal and fraudulent salary earners.”

    Okala said some state and Local Government staff verification forms were deliberately muddled up.

    “The only plausible explanation for this action could have been to cause apprehension among the civil servants across the state. In this category, a total of 1,016 Employee Biodata forms were found to be mixed-up and muddled up in MDAs different from where the civil servant is currently working.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Four abducted in Kogi

    •Bello accuses police of divulging informants’ identity

    Four persons, including an All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain, were last Friday kidnapped at Osara along the Okene-Lokoja-Abuja highway in Adavi local government area of Kogi.

    It was gathered the APC chieftain, Mallam Idris Ozi Shaibu was on his way from Abuja when gunmen numbering seven intercepted his vehicle and whisked him away.

    They reportedly collected the mobile phone of his driver, who was later released.

    An eyewitness informed another vehicle behind that of the APC’s chieftain was also stopped with all three occupants kidnapped.

    A family source close to the family of the APC’s chieftain disclosed they were in contact with the kidnappers, who have refused to place ransom on him.

    Police Public Relation Officer (PPRO) of Kogi Command William Aya could not be reached to confirm the incident.

    Governor Yahaya Bello however has alleged policemen in the state were aiding and abetting crimes.

    He stated this when the new Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) Zone 8, comprising of Kogi, Kwara and Ekiti states, Tijani Baba paid him a courtesy call at the Government House, Lokoja during the weekend.

    He said there were needs to flush out bad egg in the police perpetrating crimes in the state.

    The governor stressed that it has been discovered that when patriotic citizens volunteer information to the police, they in turn disclose to criminals, a development he described as unfortunate.

    He said that 20 patrol vehicles will be donated to the police and other security agencies to combat crime on August 27, as part of activities to mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of the creation of the state.

    He restated his administration’s resolve to continue to partner with the police and other security agencies in combating crime in the state.

    Baba said he was unhappy with unending kidnap cases, robbery and murder in the zone.

    He said there was need for assessment tour of all the states under the zone with a view to finding solution to the security challenge.

  • Kogi varsity students elated over resumption

    Students of the Kogi State University (KSU) have heaved a sigh of relief as they returned to school to complete their semester examinations. The students were sent home for four months, following an indefinite strike by a school workers over the government’s inability to pay their arrears of salaries and other allowances.

    The school was reopened last week when the government and the striking workers struck the deal to end the industrial action. As the students returned, theyvhoped both parties would sustain the agreement, praying against another strike.

    Some of them, who spoke with CAMPUSLIFE, decried the strike, describing it as an “unnecessary distraction and interruption”. Some students were philosophical about it.

    Adeleke Omofaye, a 300-Level Education student, expressed bitterness, describing the strike as the worst period in the time he spent on the campus. He said he did not pray for another strike till his last day on the campus.

    Adeleke called for understanding between government and the university workers to avoid a situation where the school would lose its credibility, because of constant disruption of its academic calendar.

    He said: “Whatever is the problem, I will appeal that all stakeholders sit down and iron out the issues, because it is affecting the fortunes of not only the students, but the institution and the government negatively. We are being perceived as an unserious institution and this is detrimental to the future of students.”

    For Victor Ogbonnaya, a 100-Level Social Science student, the strike changed all his plans, expressing regret for being a student of the institution. He said if he had had a premonition that the institution would be on strike in his first year in the school, he would have turned down the admission offer of the school.

    Steven Akoji, another student, was happy the strike was suspended, praying against its reoccurrence.

    He said: “We should hope that government now has a grasp of what the demands of the workers are. It would be in the best interest of all if the issues are resolved amicably, so that normal activities would return to the institution.”

  • Labour calls off strike in Kogi

    Labour calls off strike in Kogi

    The organised labour in Kogi State yesterday announced the suspension of its over six-week strike.

    State chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Onuh Edoka announced this at the Deputy Governor’s Office in Lokoja.

    The labour leader said the agreement was reached following the need to adopt the “committee’s report, which captured Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), Local Government Areas (LGAs), LDEAs, tertiary institutions and pensioners”.

    He added that the report would be subjected to continuous scrutiny, with the participation of labour leaders and government representatives, to achieve an authentic payroll for the state.

    “We note the painful decision to use two banks for the payment of salaries from the bailout fund. We have agreed that subsequent payments relating to bailout or other money should not be domicilled in two banks only.

    “In order words, we resolved that salaries should be paid directly to individual accounts of choice.”

    Edoka added that part of the agreement centred on the need to review appointments at the local government level, which did not reflect the principle of seniority as contained in the “Civil Service rule”.

    “We agreed on the payment of Pay As You Earn (PAYE) to return to status quo ante, while a committee of labour and government be constituted to resolve all grey areas in line with existing laws.

    “We agreed that tax refund or tax holiday be implemented by Kogi State University and College of Education, Ankpa, in respect of all cases of over taxation as approved in 2015 for the state”, Edoka added.

    The deputy governor, Muhammad Ketso, thanked the labour leaders for their understanding and sacrifice. He said the flaunting of salary payment by government as achievement was because of the downturn in the economy.

    “It is the right of a worker to earn his wages but because of the difficulty in revenue allocation, salary payment has become a thing to attribute as achievement,” he said.

    Ketso prayed that the economic downturn will soon become a thing of the past, so that government can see development as achievement rather than salary.

    He hoped the agreement would engender lasting peace in the state.

  • Kogi jailbreak: Six recaptured

    Kogi jailbreak: Six recaptured

    •Two convicts still on the run
    •Bello demands judicial enquiry

    The Comptroller-General of Nigeria Prisons Service (NPS), Ja’afaru Ahmed, yesterday, confirmed that 13 prisoners, comprising 10 pre-trial detainees and three convicts, escaped from Koton Karfe prison in Kogi State, last Saturday.

    Six pre-trial detainees were, however, recaptured and returned to the prison.  Others, including two robbery convicts are still on the run.

    Ahmed spoke during an on-the-spot assessment of the prison.

    Investigation showed the jailbreak was reportedly carried out by the inmates, who scaled the fence after breaking through the inner wall of the facility.

    A statement by the NPS spokesman, Frances Enobore, said a three-man panel was raised to investigate the circumstances surrounding the break.

    It said appropriate measures have been set up to address congestion, particularly among prisoners awaiting trial, in line with the Federal Government’s reform agenda.

    The comptroller-general added that security would be tightened to forestall a recurrence.

    A security source, who spoke in confidence, said: “It’s as if someone in the prisons did not do his/her job and prisoners took advantage of that to escape.

    “The negligence may be ‘intentional’ and I hope the authorities will probe the break to forestall a recurrence. The remanding of some kidnap kingpins, paraded by the DSS, last week, may not be unconnected with the break.”

    Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello, at the prison, appealed to the Federal Government to set up a commission of enquiry to investigate the jailbreak.

    Bello, who was shocked at the frequent breaks, said the attack seems like a conspiracy.

    The governor, who was accompanied by top security officials, was not allowed into the yard to access the damage.

    He vowed to unearth the mystery behind the break.

    The 180-capacity all-male  facility, inaugurated in 2014, has 263 inmates. It was rebuilt and ‘fortified’ after the old structure, built in 1914, was broken into four.

    State Comptroller of Prison, Mr. Musa Maza, could not be reached for comments.

  • 13 INMATES ESCAPE IN KOGI JAILBREAK

    13 INMATES ESCAPE IN KOGI JAILBREAK

    Not less than 13 inmates yesterday escaped from the Koton-Karfe Prison in Kogi State.

    This incident came barely two years after suspected insurgents attacked the facility and released inmates.

    It was learnt the inmates breached the perimeter fence and escaped into the nearby bush.

    A reliable source hinted that the incident occurred around 7am at the federal facility.

    A source, who sought anonymity, said: “There were security lapses somewhere and the inmates seized the opportunity to escape after pulling down the wall.”

    The new prison located along the Opareke Road was inaugurated by immediate Minister of Interior, Abah Moro.

    Unconfirmed report has it that the latest jail break might not be unconnected with the arrival of four suspected interstate kidnappers and armed robbers at the facility.

  • Kogi: Appeal Court likely to give judgment next week

    Kogi: Appeal Court likely to give judgment next week

    THE Appeal Tribunal on the Kogi State governorship election  may rule next week in the appeal against the ruling of the lower tribunal, which upheld the election of Governor Yahaya Bello.

     The tribunal has a 60-day window between the date of ruling, delivered on June 6, to dispense with appeals emanating from the lower tribunal.

    Ahead of the judgment, the tribunal, sitting in Abuja, on Tuesday, adopted the briefs of the All Progressives Congress (APC) deputy governorship candidate, James Faleke, and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate, former Governor Idris Wada.

    The duo contested the November 21 governorship poll, which was declared inconclusive by the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC), which also organised a supplementary election on December 5.

    The appellate court must give its verdict before August 4.

    On Tuesday, Faleke’s counsel Chief Wole Olanipekun said INEC erred  in declaring the November 21 election inconclusive, organising a supplementary poll and declaring Bello winner.

    Olanipekun, who led 33 lawyers to adopt Faleke’s brief, told the panel that the constitution was clear on what INEC should have done with the results after the November 21 election.

    He said Section 179 (2) of the Constitution states that the candidate with the highest number of votes and spread in any governorship election is deemed duly elected.

    The counsel maintained that INEC erred by glossing over that provision, saying INEC committed more blunders by allowing the second respondent (Bello) to participate in the election when he had no such locus, not being a registered voter in the state, nor having voted in the election, a position Bello’s witness admitted under cross-examination at the lower tribunal.

    Olanipekun said: “This is the first time in the history of this country that a governor would emerge without voting in an election, nor being a registered voter in the state.”

    Adopting INEC’s brief, its counsel, Alex Izinyon, argued that it was the commission’s constitutional prerogative to declare an election inconclusive and that was what INEC did.

    But a panel member asked him: “Are you saying that when INEC declares an election inconclusive, it should not be challenged? Don’t you think it is this INEC’s action of declaring elections inconclusive that had caused this problem?”

    Izinyon replied: “Yes my lord, that is why we are here to defend the election,” arguing that the petitioner filed his petition at the lower tribunal out of time.

    But Olanipekun countered, saying under the extant law, a right to present a petition before a tribunal cannot accrue until a return is made by INEC on the election, a position which is in accord with  the Electoral Act.

    One of the judges asked Izinyon if there should be no remedy to a cause of action or a wrong, especially as it affects the petitioner’s rights.

    Bello’s lead counsel Joseph Daudu canvassed the dismissal of the appellant’s petition on the grounds that the votes accruing from the two elections belonged not to an individual but to the party.

    All parties agreed that Faleke’s petition revolved around the November 21, 2015, election. They agreed that the declaration of the election inconclusive had nothing to do with the death of Prince Abubakar Audu, as the declaration preceded Audu’s demise.

    The plank of the appellant’s case is the constitutionality of the declaration of the election “inconclusive”, while the respondents maintained that the declaration robbed the appellant the requisite standing to have locus standi.

    The appeal tribunal earlier gave all parties 10 minutes each to adopt their addresses.

  • PDP wins Kogi East senatorial rerun

    A former Chief of Air Staff and member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Air Vice-Marshal Isaac Alfa (retd), has been declared winner of last Saturday’s Kogi East senatorial rerun.

    Alfa polled 57, 575 votes to defeat five others. The election held in 236 of the 1,080 polling units.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) did not participate in the rerun due to an Appeal Court judgment which prohibited it from fielding a candidate.

    Returning Officer Prof. Lucky Ovwhasa said only 140, 297 of the 643,559 registered voters participated in the election.

  • 9,000 ‘ghost workers’ detected in Kogi

    9,000 ‘ghost workers’ detected in Kogi

    The Kogi State government has said 9,000 workers did not come for workers’ verification, making it dub them as “ghost workers”.

    Chairman of the Screening Committee Henry Agbaji spoke yesterday at a stakeholders’ meeting at the Government House in Lokoja.

    Agbaji said 25,208 forms were given out in the 21 councils, but only 22,272 workers came for screening. The 2,936 workers, who did not come, are considered as “ghost workers”.

    “Twenty-five thousand, two hundred and sixty-two  screening forms were issued to primary school teachers but only 22,608 showed up for the screening, indicating that the 3,005 who did not show up are also ghost workers,” he added.

    Agbaji noted that some workers had issues ranging from forged certificates, lack of Bank Verification Number (BVN) or statement of accounts, while some worked in another state but draw salary either from the state or at the local government level.

    Auditor-General of local governments Alhaji Ahmed Ododo said the back-up committee charged with cross-checking activities of the screening committee, found out that over 40 untreated forms were included on the screened list.

    “The committee’s findings, as revealed at the meeting, were just one per cent of the anomalies discovered. In College of Education, Ankpa, Mr. Orokpo David, who joined the civil service in 1977 and has worked for 39 years, was cleared by the committee.

    “Also in Kogi State University (KSU), there was a case of double employment. Dr. Alabi David Oladele filled and signed two forms and was cleared.

    “It was discovered that Dr. Alabi is a staff of KSU and the Kogi State University Teaching Hospital. This man draws about N560,000 from each of the institutions,” Ododo said.

    He said it was discovered that the Kogi State Polytechnic staff strength was overbloated by over 1,200, and appealed to Governor Yahaya Bello to delegate a team to the institution to unravel the anomaly.

  • Six killed, 12 injured in Kogi crash

    Six persons died and 12 others injured in an accident on the Anyigba-Ajaokuta road at Ojuwo-Olijo in Ofu Local Government Area of Kogi State last Saturday.

    The accident involved a Toyota bomber bus (MKD 841 XA) and Golf (LKJ 335 CV).

    Assistant Corps Commander of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Mrs. Amobi Modupe Stanley, who confirmed the accident, said it occurred at 1.15pm.

    She said her men got to the scene at about 1.59pm; six of the passengers died on the spot while 12 others sustained injuries.

    The injured are receiving treatment at Rima hospital and the bodies have also been deposited there.

    She identified dangerous overtaking as the cause of the accident and advised drivers to be patient on the highway, especially during festive periods.