workers over the past year. “Where there is clear evidence, the ... divisive elements have no room in Tanzania,” he said.
With the submission by the Controller and Audit General (CAG) that
phantom workers exist in the civil service it was appropriate for
President John Magufuli to adopt the ‘Boils’ Metaphor! As Dr Gastor
Mapunda put it and I quote. “ We all know, boils constitute an illness
in the human body. To be more precise, it is a skin infection which
develops as a lump, which in turn turns into pus under the skin. Boils
may develop singly or in groups. Boils are usually caused by a germ
which enters the body through tiny scratches or cuts in the skin, and
sometimes they can extend down to the hair follicle. Boils usually
swell, but more importantly, they may spread to other parts of the body,
and usually cause a fever. As such, boils must be treated, and the kind
of treatment may depend on the seriousness of the infection”.
.While no one ever doubted that this was happening on account of
shoddy book-keeping and corruption in the nation’s civil service, the
number reportedly involved and the length of time for which this crime
has gone on remains baffling. This is a shame that illustrates the
tardiness with which government business is conducted.
It is therefore of paramount importance that investigation the
ghost workers should be conducted, hand culprits over to relevant
agencies of government for prosecution and recover from colluding banks
in the scam, the money paid through such banks. This is the least
Tanzanians can ask for.
Indeed, with all due diligences done, could there not be more than
ghost workers? It would have been better if the government had concluded
the investigations and confirmed the exact number of ghost workers.
Therefore, the then ministry responsible should be cautious in its
assumptions until investigations throw up the realities of the claim.
On the plan to recover money from banks, this seems to suggest that
only the banks were responsible for the scam. The truth is that the
then ministry’s officials sent list of employees to be paid and the
amount covering such payments to those banks with which they may have
colluded.
Thus, in sharing any arising liability of refunding money, the
weight of contribution should be considered and the liability may be
shared equally between the then ministry and any affected bank. In the
unlikely case that no bank is found culpable, the then ministry would
then seem to be the sole cesspit of the scam. Whatever the case, whoever
perpetrated the fraud must be sanctioned through the courts of law.
The civil service must also take full responsibility for any ghost
worker on its payroll given its obvious incompetent, ineffective and
slow registration of employees in biometric register. If the then
ministry had dutifully implemented the employee registration exercise,
there would, perhaps, not have been ghost workers or, at least the
number would have been insignificant. It is fair to bet that slow
implementation of the Biometric Voters Registry ( BRV) was a form of
sabotage to enable perpetrators of the ghost workers fraud continue
their criminal act.
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