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Delta to recover N1.9b from alleged corrupt civil servants

By Hendrix Oliomogbe, Asaba
24 January 2017   |   3:39 am
Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa has vowed to recover N1.9 billion from corrupt public servants who fraudulently falsified their dates of birth and other records.
Ifeanyi Okowa

Ifeanyi Okowa

Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa has vowed to recover N1.9 billion from corrupt public servants who fraudulently falsified their dates of birth and other records.

Speaking in Asaba while receiving the report from the Mrs. Nkem Okwuofu headed Committee on Verification of date of birth and employment of public officers in Delta State, Okowa decried falsification of documents and also, condemned attitude of those who aid and abet such actions.

He said: “From the report before us, out of 1,113 persons who were invited by the committee, only 376 officers were cleared, 291 are supposed to have retired which means they are receiving salaries they ought not to receive,” the governor stated, asserting, “these set of
persons and those who failed to appear before the Committee should be expunged immediately from the payroll.”

Okowa, who bemoaned the connivance of staff of Directorate of Establishment and Pensions in the falsification of records, directed the office of the Head of Service to carry out an investigation and ensure that those culpable were disciplined .

He added: “A lot of questions need answers from the Directorate of Establishment because, these anomalies should not arise if they did their work creditably; those involved in these anomalies should be brought to book; this is a wakeup call in the public service that a
lot need to be done to sanitize the system because we also have had situations within the public service, especially in the local government system where people who are not entitled to promotion were promoted and those who were due, were denied.”

On the issue of some civil servants who can no longer carry out their functions due to ill health, Okowa directed the office of the Head of Service to liaise with the Ministry of Health to set up a medical board to handle such cases. The governor insisted that the verification exercise was not a witch-hunt but was designed to ensure that salaries are justifiably earned and only those who worked for it are paid.

According to Mrs. Okwuofu, the Committee discovered that some staff on the payroll who ought to have retired but for the falsification of records and others whose dates of birth were adjusted, were reversed to their verified dates and this has resulted in financial gains of
N1, 976, 845, 123, 21.

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