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108 civil servants get salaries, allowances after three years

Senate Committee on Public Procurement, Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Federal Civil Servants, Federal Service Commission, FCSC, Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System, IPPIS, Oleli Amadi, Nigerian Prison Service, NPS,Nigeria, Establishment and Public Service Matters,

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Senator Andrew Uchendu says Rivers citizens should be ready to claim their state back
Senator Andrew Uchendu pushed for 108 civil servants to be included in IPPIS for salaries, allowances
Senator Andrew Uchendu pushed for 108 civil servants to be included in IPPIS for salaries and allowances

About 108 civil servants in Nigeria have finally been captured in the Federal Government’s Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System (IPPIS) enabling them access to salaries and allowances. 

The civil servants owe their breakthrough to the senator representing Rivers East Senatorial District in the National Assembly, Senator Andrew Uchendu.

Uchendu, acting chairman, Senate Committee on Public Procurement, in a statement issued in Port Harcout on Tuesday, stated that hope has been restored to the lives of 108 Federal Civil Servants, Rivers citizens inclusive, who were recruited by the Federal Civil Service Commission (FCSC) in 2014, but did not receive salaries and allowances for over three years.

He said: “These persons were not paid their financial entitlements for such a long time because they were not included in the payment schedule of the Federal Civil Service for various reasons, including not being captured on the IPPIS.

“I was worried and unhappy that citizens of this country who were duly recruited according to the Federal Civil Service rules since 2014, could not receive their salaries and entitlements, even when their colleagues were getting monthly remunerations ever since.

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“This prompted me to move a motion on the floor of the Red Chamber on January 30, 2018, that sought the speedy inclusion of these Federal Civil Servants into the IPPIS, and prayed the Senate to investigate why they were not captured on the system.

“Consequently, the Senate, adopted the prayer raised through the motion which received support from all the senators present at plenary, and directed its Committee on Establishment and Public Service Matters to investigate why the Federal Civil Servants in question were not captured on the IPPIS platform.

“Today, I am delighted to inform Nigerians that following the motion, subsequent investigation and intervention by the Senate, these 108 Federal Civil Servants have now been fully captured on the IPPIS and enlisted for payment of salaries and allowances by the FCSC. I am glad because God has used me to bring succour and greater hope to these our brothers and sisters.”

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Earlier, the Senate, through the instrumentality of Uchendu, after due investigation, directed the Nigerian Prisons Service (NPS), to reinstate and pay all salaries and entitlements to Oleli Amadi, a prisons officer who was wrongfully dismissed after 30 years of meritorious service.

According to Uchendu, “This is what is generally referred to as effective representation. I assure the people of Rivers State that, I will continue to be their ear, eye and mouth in the Senate. This is my solemn pledge.” 

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