Madagascar’s civil servants have threatened to go on strike in January if the government fails to pay their salaries.
About
10,000 workers, including directors and senior managers in State
departments, risked missing their December pay after their names were
reportedly deleted from the public sector payroll database.
Of those, nearly 4,000 are long-serving government employees.
The
Minister of Social law and Public Function, Jean de Dieu Maharante,
said staff at the Ministry of Finance and Budget accidentally deleted
the names as they were yet to be familiar with the new software the
government is using to audit its payroll in effort to flush out ghost
workers.
The workers’ unions have given the government
until end of the year to address the issue, without which they plan to
boycott work starting January 5, 2018.
“The government
promised the missed pay issue will be fixed by Friday,” the head of the
Magistrates' Union of Madagascar, Ms Ernaivo Fanirisoa, at the end of
talks with the Finance ministry.
“They said 5,000 of
the affected public servants had already received their salaries,
meaning the situation is yet to be fixed,” she added.
The
union leader said the government should seek alternative methods of
purging ghost workers in its payroll as “the current one has completely
failed to produce the expected result”.
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