The
leading pro-democracy and civil Rights advocacy group – HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS
ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA (HURIWA) has expressed shock that university teachers
are kicking against a policy that would bring about accountability,
transparency and wipe off the phenomenon of ghost workers in the payments of
salaries.
In a
statement by the National Coordinator Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko and the
National Media Affairs Director Miss. Zainab Yusuf, HURIWA said universities as
bastions of learning ought to be the first amongst the governmental
institutions that should endorse the integrated payroll and personnel
information system. The Rights group said the reason for opposition of this
21st century compliant payment system by the Academic Staff Union of
Universities (ASUU) does not add up because to begin with the President of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria is the official and symbolic visitor to all the
Federal universities even as the Federal government of Nigeria is the employer
of labour in all Universities at the Federal level since they draw up their
funding components from the federation accounts.
“Indeed
there are several issues that must not be muddled up and dirtied in the muddy
water of politics. One of such things is the Federal government’s integrated
payroll and personnel information system which governs the accountable and
transparent payment of salaries of workers employed by the Nigerian state. For
us in the organized human rights
community, in as much as we are not comfortable with the lack of openness in
the office of the Accountant General of the Federation, we think that all the
36 states of the Federation should be made to adopt that seamless form of
payments of salaries known as IPPIS.”
“We
are of the belief that if the officials of the office of the accountant general
of the Federation are made to comply with best global practices and abide by
professional codes of conduct in the discharge of the onerous obligations of
administering the secretariat of the integrated payroll and personnel
information system, then we think the government would have carried out an
aspect of what the constitution stipulates in section 15(5) that government shall
abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of office.”
“Since
IPPIS department is responsible for payment of salaries and wages directly to
Government employee’s bank account with appropriate deductions and remittances
of 3rd party payments such as; Federal Inland Revenue Service, State Boards of
Internal Revenue, National Health Insurance Scheme, National Housing Fund,
Pension Fund Administrator, Cooperative Societies, Trade Unions Dues,
Association Dues and Bank Loans, we are finding it very much shocking that
University who should be at the forefront of campaign for an accountable and
transparent payment system in the Country are those kicking against this noble
idea which if implemented faithfully is capable of checking the ghosts workers
syndrome which creates corruption on a large scale in the Federal civil
service. We urge Academic Staff Unions
of Nigerian Universities to enrol in this IPPIS to help the Nigerian nation to
wage forensic war against corruption. ”
“HURIWA
fully supports this programme especially if the staff of the Office of the
Accountant General of the Federation would be institutionally guided and
compelled to be committed to efficient and effective service delivery and if
indeed in reality the main aim of IPPIS is to pay accurately and on time within
statutory and contractual regulations, then we do not think there is any
rational basis for kicking against it from all quarters. HURIWA charges the
Federal Government to aim to provide a payroll service that is customer focused
and that utilizes technology wherever possible as profusely pledged by the
Secretariat of IPPIS domiciled within the office of the Accountant General of
the Federation. HURIWA has been informed that there are 459 MDAS on IPPIS
Platform as at 31st June, 2017. The department is responsible for processing
and payment of salary to over Three hundred thousand (300,000) Federal
Government Employees across the 459 MDAs. We are told that IPPIS aim is to
enroll into the platform, all Federal Government MDAs that draws personnel cost
fund from the Consolidated Revenue Fund. We have been told that since inception
of the IPPIS project in April 2007, the departments have saved the Federal
Government of Nigeria billions of Naira by eliminating thousands of ghost
workers.”
HURIWA
recalled that Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) had insisted that
their members wouldn't enrol just as they have given reasons why it rejected
the plan by the Federal Government to enroll university workers into the
Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS).
HURIWA
recalled that ASUU said it violated university autonomy even as ASUU's
Coordinator in Lagos zone, Prof. Olusiji Sowande, who stated this during a
media briefing at the Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAAB),
said the policy was not acceptable to the union.
HURIWA
quoted the ASUU official as stating thus: "In addition to the Act
establishing each university, there is the Universities Miscellaneous
Provisions (Amendment) Act, 2003. The Act states in Section 2(A) that the power
of the council shall be exercised as in the laws and statutes of each
university and to that extent, the establishment circulars that are
inconsistent with the laws and statutes of the university shall not apply to
the university. IPPIS will not recognize nor adequately capture the flexibility
and peculiarities of the university system in terms of replacement/recruitment
of staff,” he said.
HURIWA
however asked ASUU to stop their opposition to the implementation of the new
salary payment system which would eliminate traces of malpractice and fraud
just as the Rights group wondered how teachers in the Universities are quoting
the statute granting autonomy to Universities just so they can be excused from
observing transparent and an accountable salaries payment system which IPPIS
represents as if to say that the funds that go into the running and development
of these institutions are not drawn from the public coffers. "HURIWA
thinks that the position of ASUU has no rational, empirical and constitutional
basis just as the group asked ASUU to accept the policy or go to court to test
the waters.
Relatedly,
the Rights group has challenged the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
(EFCC) to spend enough resources to enlighten the Nigerian youths about the
dangers of their involvement in advanced fees fraud or yahoo yahoo. "EFCC
should be concerned about motivating the Nigerian youths to reject the criminal
tendencies of Advanced Fees fraud instead of spending more money on media
trials of youngsters which has adverse consequences to our global image. The
media narrative already crafted and been forcefully pushed by EFCC that our
youths are all after making quick money through illicit means has seriously
harmed the corporate image of Nigeria and has affected the respectability of
Nigerians abroad."
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