The House of Representatives on Tuesday
asked the Ministry of Interior to “immediately” comply with the
presidential directive to employ the victims of the 2014 Nigerian
Immigration Service recruitment stampede in order to put an end to the
national embarrassment caused by the tragedy.
A three-man panel of the House headed by
the Majority Leader, Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila, gave the directive in Abuja,
asking the ministry to liaise with the Immigration/Prisons Service
Board to ensure that the victims were absorbed into the NIS.
Other members of the panel are the
Minority Leader, Mr. Leo Ogor; and former Chairman, House Committee on
Judiciary, Mr. Aminu Shagari.
Fifteen job seekers had died nationwide during the stampede in March 2014, while 131 others sustained injuries.
Former President Goodluck Jonathan had
directed that three members of the family of each dead victim should be
given employment while those who sustained injuries among the job
seekers should be offered automatic employment.
The NIS calculated the total number of the beneficiaries to be 176.
However, the presidential directive had
not been complied with over one year after the incident, forcing the
beneficiaries to protest to the National Assembly on Thursday last week.
It turned out that though some of the beneficiaries actually got letters of employment, the process was not formalised.
The House panel gave the directive on
Tuesday after it heard “shocking” comments by the Permanent Secretary in
the Ministry of Interior, Mr. Abubakar Magaji, who claimed that the
presidential directive was not backed by a “letter of approval.”
Speaking for the panel, Gbajabiamila
expressed disbelief that a government agency would sit on a presidential
directive on the excuse that it was waiting for another approval.
He said, “It is in your own interest to
give effect to the presidential directive by employing the 176
beneficiaries immediately.
“Work out their salaries and include everything in your 2016 budget and forward to the House.
“We will withhold your 2016 budget if it comes without a provision for these 176 stampede victims. You are advised.”
Ogor also noted that the interior
ministry, the board and the NIS should be “ashamed” of the national
tragedy instead of allowing “unnecessary technicalities” to stall a
presidential directive.
“All you are saying are technicalities;
what happened that day was an embarrassment to the whole nation. This
was an issue of an abnormal situation. There was a presidential
directive, which was not obeyed,” the lawmaker said.
The permanent secretary had defended the
non-compliance with the presidential directive on the grounds that there
was no formal letter of approval from the former President to back the
directive.
He claimed that the letters of employment
being bandied by some of the victims were “ceremonial” and were only
given out in the hope that they would be formalised by a “final
approval” from the President.
“The letters issued were ceremonial;
symbolic, but I asked the board to quickly follow it with a letter to
Mr. President to formalise the appointments so that salaries can be
processed for these people,” Magaji stated.
But, the House committee members
disagreed with him, saying that it was taken for granted that there was a
budget for the recruitment before the NIS embarked on it.
Gbajabiamila stated, “This thing is
taking a whole new dimension. Don’t allow people go away with the
impression that the original immigration recruitment was a scam.
“Where were you supposed to get salaries in the first place to pay those to be recruited?
“Why are you now saying that there should
have been another presidential approval before you could process
salaries for the 176 victims?”
But, Magaji stood his ground, arguing
that having worked in the civil service for about 32 years, he knew
there was no way the victims would get a salary without the presidential
approval.
He explained that this was due to the
fact that the case of the victims was handled by the Presidential
Committee on Immigration stampede and not the board.
He added that in a situation where the
function of the board was taken over by a committee, any recommendations
of the presidential committee would revert to the President for
approval before payments would be effected by the Budget Office of the
Federation.
The House panel will report its findings and recommendations to the House on Thursday (tomorrow).
0 comments:
Post a Comment