No fewer
than 23,306 names are to be deleted from the Federal Government’s payroll.
A team
probing multiple salary payments recommended 23,306 civil servants and some
banks for thorough investigations.
The
government has started deleting the indicted civil servants from its payroll,
The Nation learnt yesterday.
It was
also learnt that some of those affected have tendered their resignation letters
to pre-empt dismissal from service and prosecution.
According
to a source, of 312,306 civil servants, whose bank accounts have so far been
checked through the Bank Verification Number (BVN) platform, 23,306 have issues
with their accounts.
The source
claimed that with the adoption of the BVN for salary payment, the Federal
Ministry of Finance has so far checked the details of about 312,000 civil
servants— a development said to have led to the discovery of many
irregularities in salary payment.
“Out of
the accounts of about 312,000 civil servants processed so far, the ministry was
said to have uncovered irregularities in the account of about 23,306 of them,
who were suspected to have been collecting double salary.
“These
indicted individuals are in two categories. In the first group, we found out
that the names of some civil servants, whose salaries are being processed, are
different from the names on the accounts where their salaries are paid. What
this means is either those in this category are drawing salary from two sources
(which could be different agencies), or they are ghost workers,” the source
said.
The source
added that the probe also showed that salaries were being paid to some inactive
accounts, thus raising the suspicion that government was merely making payment
to ghost workers.
But it was
gathered yesterday that the Federal Government has placed some banks under
watch for their roles in the salary scam.
The probe
panel was said to have discovered that some of the inactive accounts were
domiciled in a particular branch of a bank.
It was
learnt that over 300 accounts of some civil servants were opened on the same
day and all of them have become dormant.
The
Special Adviser to the Minister of Finance on Media Matters, Mr. Festus Akanbi,
said last night, “The public will be appropriately briefed when the full report
is ready.”
The
adoption of the BVN became inevitable due to the failure of the Integrated
Payroll Personnel Information System (IPPIS) to effectively deal with the issue
of ghost workers in the federal civil service.
A source
in the ministry explained that the strategy of using BVN rather than requiring
the physical presence of each worker “significantly simplified and accelerated
the progress of the project and at a lower cost than previously incurred”.
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