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Exemption of ASUU from IPPIS unfair, civil servants complain

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Ibrahim Ramalan
Ibrahim Ramalan
Ibrahim Ramalan is a graduate of Mass Communications from the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria. With nearly a decade-long, active journalism practice, Mr Ramalan has been able to rise from a cub reporter to the exalted position of an editor; first as Arts Editor with the Blueprint Newspapers before resigning in 2019; second and presently as an Associate Editor of the Daily Nigerian online newspaper. He can be reached via ibroramalan@gmail.com, or www.facebook.com/ibrahim.ramalana, or @McRamalan on Twitter.
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tiamin rice
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Some civil servants have criticised the exemption of university lecturers under the aegis of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, from the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System, IPPIS.

The civil servants expressed their reservation in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria.

The IPPIS was created in 2006 as part of the reform initiatives of the Federal Government to enhance the storage of personnel records and streamline the administration of monthly payroll.

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But over the years, the leadership of ASUU had agitated for the Federal Government to exempt university lecturers from IPPIS and create an alternative payment platform for them.

The agitation by ASUU resulted in an eight-month long strike by union in 2022.

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The Federal Executive Council, FEC, in a meeting on Dec. 13, finally approved the removal of public tertiary institutions from IPPIS.

The Minister of Information, Mohammed Idris, said that the development meant that members of staff of public universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education have been taken off IPPIS.

Grace Uzor, a Civil Servant, said that IPPIS was created to eliminate unauthorised personnel workforce (ghost workers) from government payroll.

According to Mr Uzor, IPPIS was also created to make retrieval of personnel information of all public servants seamless.

She said that allowing the university lecturers to exit the system was unacceptable, adding that the system only needed to be monitored and sanitised.

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“If the policy that was put in place to prevent corruption can not work it is a problem.

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“And if any group of people can choose to exit a laid down policy, it also means that there is a problem,” she said.

An accountant, Emmanuel Isa, said that the scheme programmed automatic stoppage of payment to personnel due for retirement as a result of length of service, age and tenure, thus reducing wastage or unauthorised payments.

He said that under the IPPIS, unapplied and unutilised funds were easily monitored and tracked.

“Monthly emoluments are paid to all public servants on the scheme same day, no matter the location within the country without delay.

“From all indications, the scheme is good but the Federal Government only needed to sanitise it,” he said.

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Another Civil Servant, Abbas Aliu, said that the government should scrap IPPIS if it was no longer desirable, rather than its selective application.

“If IPPIS has not lived up to expectation, it should be scrapped, rather than its selective application, after all we are all employees of the same government,” he said.

A financial expert, Okechukwu Unegbu, said that it was regrettable that even with IPPIS, incidents of ghost workers had not abated.

Mr Unegbu, a past president of the Chattered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria, CIBN, urged the Federal Government to scrap the entire IPPIS system if it was not able to sanitise it and make it function optimally.
NAN

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