Workers from across the country have
welcomed the news of the approval by President Muhammadu Buhari of a
special bailout package for the three tiers of government to settle
outstanding salary obligations.
However, the workers and other analysts
have warned government officials, especially state governors, against
spending the money on frivolous things instead of paying civil servants
and public service employees.
Presidency sources had disclosed on
Monday that Buhari had approved a comprehensive relief package worth
N713.7bn to pay federal workers and bail out cash-strapped states, many
of which had been unable to pay their employees.
The
package includes the sharing of $1.6bn dividend and $500m tax by the
Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Limited paid between the federal and
state governments.
Besides, the Central Bank of Nigeria is
to set up a special intervention fund that will offer between N250bn and
N300bn as a soft loan to the states to enable them pay the backlog of
salaries.
The President also approved a debt
relief programme proposed by the Debt Management Office, which would
help the states to restructure their commercial loans with banks
currently put at over N660bn to extend the life span of such loans and
reduce the states’ debt servicing expenditures.
In Osun State, the Chairman of the state
chapter of the Nigeria Union of Teachers, Mr. Wakeel Amudah, on Tuesday
hailed Buhari for approving the bailout package.
He said the approval of the funds for the states, including Osun, was a confirmation that God answers prayers.
He said any governor, who diverted the funds, should be sanctioned heavily by the President.
Amudah said, “We can only advise our
governor and his colleagues to adhere religiously to the purpose for
which the money is meant for. We have to drum it into their ears not to
divert the funds.
“I will also suggest that the President
should sanction any governor who diverts the fund for other uses. The
money is meant for the payment of salaries of workers and it should be
strictly used for that purpose.”
A cross section of workers in Cross
River State on Tuesday commended the President’s gesture, but insisted
that the funds must be properly monitored so as not to create an avenue
for another round of corruption.
A Calabar-based legal practitioner and
activist, Chief Utum Eteng said, “The gesture shows the unparalleled
generosity of President Muhammadu Buhari. The bailout is for all the
states and not the APC controlled states alone.
“However, releasing money to the states
requires proper supervision of disbursement because that is the hotbed
for both corruption and stealing. Some governors may end up not paying
this money if not properly monitored.”
The Chairman of the state Trade Union
Congress, Mr. Clarkson Otu, said the bailout was commendable as it would
allow the state governments to reposition their economies and start
afresh.
“There was just no way the state
governments would have continued to run. This bailout is commendable. It
will enable the governments to pay salaries and reposition themselves,”
he said.
In Oyo State, the state civil servants
received the news with mixed feelings. While some were optimistic that
their situation would change for the better, others said it was a thing
of shame that state governments could accumulate many months of unpaid
salaries, wondering what would have been the workers’ fate if the
Federal Government had not intervened.
A mid-level officer in the state
Ministry of Health, who did not give his name, urged the state
government to restructure its spending and boost savings.
The state chairman of the NLC, Waheed
Olojede, said it was too early for celebration because no one was sure
of how much the states would get.
The Nigeria Voters’ Assembly also
commended the President for bailing out the states that were facing
difficulties paying their workers’ salaries.
In a statement signed by its President,
Mashood Erubami, the group described the gesture of the President as
welcoming and lifesaving.
A civil right activist and Bayelsa State
Coordinator, Environmental Right Action, Mr. Alagoa Morris, urged the
governors to ensure that the money was used for the purpose it was
approved.
“The state governors should ensure the
funds are used to bridge the lacuna in salaries and pensions, especially
in Bayelsa State where pensioners are crying out over unpaid
gratuities,” he said.
Though he commended Buhari for the
gesture, he wondered where he got the money from when he had already
claimed that he met an empty treasury.
The Kogi State Government and the state
Chairman of the NLC, Mr. Onuh Edoka, described the bailout by Buhari as a
cheering development.
The state Commissioner for Information,
Zainab Okino, said the bailout came at an appropriate time when many
state governments had become cash-strapped.
“The bailout has come in the nick of
time when almost all state governments in Nigeria are cash-strapped. It
will help a lot in the payment of salaries. Though we have been paying
salaries and owe only a month, it nevertheless will shore up the
finances of the state government,” she said.
Edoka urged state governments across the nation to ensure that the money was strictly used for the payment of workers’ salaries.
He also advised state governors to make
the payment of workers’ salaries a top priority, adding that
infrastructural development should not be prioritised above the payment
of salaries.
Some stakeholders in Ondo State
commended the President for the gesture, saying it would go a long way
in ameliorating the sufferings of the workers as a result of the
non-payment of their salaries.
The state Commissioner for Information,
Mr. Kayode Akinmade, explained that the development was the outcome of a
meeting of the state governors and the President.
The Chairman of the Joint Negotiating
Council of the NLC and Trade Union Congress in the state, Mr. Sunday
Adeleye, commended the President for the gesture, adding that with the
development, there would not be any excuse for any state government to
owe salaries again.
The Kwara State Chairman of the TUC, Mr.
Olumoh Kolawole, the organised labour would monitor the utilisation of
the bailout funds.
The Centre for Social Justice, however,
faulted the bailout package approved by the President, stating that the
release of the funds would encourage fiscal rascality.
The Lead Director, CSJ, Mr. Eze
Onyekpere, said while the intervention appeared good on the surface, a
careful analysis of the legal and policy implications of the move
indicated that the Federal Government might be setting a bad precedent
in the area of fiscal governance.
For instance, he said in all the
discussions between the President and the governors that preceded the
bailout package, there was no mention or acknowledgement of the
contributions of the governors to the inability of their states to pay
the workers and the parlous state of their finances.
Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose,
said the N2.1bn accruable to the state from the N413.7bn dividend and
tax paid by the NLNG was not a bailout but a legitimate earning of the
state a one of the federating units in the country.
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