Money Markets
By GEORGE NGIGI, gngigi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Ecobank employees accuse the lender of excessive hiring of expatriates in positions where there are thousands of qualified Kenyans.
- Kenya’s immigration rules allow the hiring of expatriates only in positions where local expertise is not available.
- The expatriates have two years to train a Kenyan apprentice who eventually takes over the job.
A bruising war has broken out between Ecobank Kenya
and its employees over alleged excessive hiring of expatriates in
positions where there are thousands of qualified Kenyans.
The employees, through the Banking Insurance and Financing
Union (Bifu), accuse the pan-African lender of failing to honour a
collective bargaining agreement signed between the union and Kenya
Bankers Association, saying it had reported the bank to the
International Labour Organisation (ILO) in Geneva for bad labour
relations.
“We are taking them to court because they have
refused to pay as per the scale from the collective banking agreement
yet employees are paying agency fees to the union,” said Tom Odera, the
chief executive of the union.
Ecobank, however, dismissed the union’s claims,
insisting that it was paying its staff in line with the agreement and is
not aware of the alleged forwarding of the matter to the ILO.
Ehouman Kassi, the Ecobank Kenya chief executive,
defended the bank’s labour relations record, saying it had introduced a
performance-based bonus programme that enables it to reward performing
staff even as it struggled to rise from its loss position.
The union had also written to the immigration
department and the bank, seeking justification for the appointment of
foreigners and the status of their work permits.
Ecobank has eight expatriates in its executive suite, up from two three years ago.
Mr Kassi, who replaced Nigerian Tony Okpanachi,
three years ago is Ivorian and it is under his leadership that the
number of expatriates is said to have more than trebled.
Head of technology and operations, Didier Koffi,
shares nationality with the managing director while procurement is
headed by Ivan Asiimwe from Rwanda.
Briton, Gloria Byamugisha, is the head of human
resources and also serves as regional head while Ugandan Nuhu Kanyike is
in charge of cards.
Four Nigerians: Kingsley Onyia, Abubakar Yusuf,
Olanike Kolawole and Steven Amangbo are head of tax, credit
administration, domestic banking and regional head of treasury.
Two others Alto Sandie and Eric Koffie hold group
positions in card business and sit at Ecobank Towers in Nairobi — the
group headquarters for cards business.
Ecobank said that at 13, the appointments were a
small fraction of a total staff population of 448 and that the
expatriates were necessary to infuse the group culture in the Kenyan
operation.
“When we set up a new business we want to drive the
culture of the institution into that business so we usually bring in
some senior staff who have been in the business for like 10-15 years to
hand-hold the others and help them over a couple of years,” said Mr
Kassi, adding that 16 Kenyans are working in similar positions in other
Ecobank stations across the continent.
Kenya’s immigration rules allow the hiring of
expatriates only in positions where local expertise is not available.
The expatriates have two years to train a Kenyan apprentice who
eventually takes over the job. Kenya issues non-renewable two-year work
permits to foreigners.
No comments :
Post a Comment