Minister of State, President’s Office (Public Service Management and Good Governance), Ms Angela Kairuki
AS the purge on phantom workers continues countrywide, the government has issued a two-day ultimatum to 136 public institutions to submit records of non-existent employees lest they are reported to the president for further action.
A breakdown issued by the President’s
Office - Public Service Management and Good Governance yesterday
indicated that a total of 11 councils, 10 boards, 25 public higher
learning institutions as well as three designate referral hospitals were
yet to present their records.
Also on the list are 12 offices of
administrative secretaries in 12 regions, six regulatory authorities, 10
commissions and 30 government agencies in addition to 38 local
government authorities.
According to the Communications Officer
in the President’s Office (Public Service Management and Good
Governance), Mr James Mwanamyoto, the public institutions have until
August 24 (tomorrow) to furnish the names to the office.
“At the end of the deadline, the office
will present to the president the list of identified ghost workers in
respective institutions and those which will fail to submit their
records,” Mr Mwanamyoto explained.
He mentioned some of the institutions,
which are yet to submit the catalog of phantom employees as the National
Economic Empowerment Council (NEEC), National Council for Technical
Education (NACTE), National Sports Council and the National Examinations
Council of Tanzania (NECTA).
The National Environmental Council of
Tanzania (NEMC), Fair Competition Tribunal, the Higher Education
Students’ Loan Board (HESLB) and the Tanzania Tobacco Board are among
institutions, which have been placed under spotlight for failure to
submit the names.
On the other hand, the Sokoine
University of Agriculture (SUA), University of Dodoma (UDOM), the
College of Business Education (CBE), Dar es Salaam Maritime Institute
(DMI) and Centre for Foreign Diplomacy make up a fraction of higher
learning institutions which are yet to provide the names of their ghost
workers.
The offices of Regional Administrative
Secretaries in Dar es Salaam, Arusha, Dodoma, Geita, Kigoma and Arusha
in addition Mbeya and Mtwara have the two-day ultimatum to meet the
deadline lest they face disciplinary actions.
“There are also regulatory authorities
such as Social Security Regulatory Authority (SSRA), Tanzania Education
Authority (TEA), Tanzania Trade Development Authority (TanTrade) as well
as the Capital Development Authority (CDA) and the Export Zones
Processing Authority (EPZA), which have not submitted their lists,” he
explained.
The Minister of State in President’s
Office (Public Service Management and Good Governance), Ms Angella
Kairuki, told a news conference last Friday that the government had
saved a total of 16.15bn/- , which were hitherto paid to ghost workers.
According to the minister, the exercise had so far enabled the
government to identify and strike off the payroll a total of 16,127
ghost workers from the public service as of August 17.
Ms Kairuki revealed further that 233
civil servants are under their radar on suspicion of being involved in
the ghost workers’ scam. She said that the government had started taking
various measures, including sacking three civil service administrators
behind the mess, as 606 civil servants are being interrogated by both
the police and Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau (PCCB).
Ms Kairuki stressed the need for
government departments, agencies and institutions who have not yet
presented to the ministry the verification report to do so before the
deadline.
“My ministry is due to present the
official verification report to President John Magufuli with attachments
that will list government institutions that have taken action to remove
ghost workers as well as those who have declined,” she explained.
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