How Salaries Commission Saved FG over N400bn from DTA Fraud, Others

How Salaries Commission Saved FG over N400bn from DTA Fraud, Others

The National Salaries, Income and Wages Commission (NSIWC), has disclosed that it has saved the federal government over N400 billion by stopping Duty Tour Allowance (DTA) fraud and other illegal allowances in public institutions.

The Chairman of NSIWC, Chief Richard Egbule in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, said many government agencies were in the habit of giving their workers allowances without getting appropriate approval.

“Some board chairmen are in the habit of pushing the chief executives to pay what is not appropriate or authorised by government.

“In some of these agencies, you will find people taking salaries as well as allowances that they are not supposed to take, or taking the rate of allowances that they are not supposed to take.

“We have seen cases where they abuse the periodicity of payments. For instance, if somebody is supposed to get furniture allowance once every four years, they will instead pay the same amount every year.

“In fact, the most abused payments relates to DTA. The highest per night, which is meant for a minister is N35, 000 but in some agencies, that is not even what they pay a level 8 officer.

“On their own, they will extend it even as high as N150,000 per night.

“Also, you won’t believe that staff schools which are the concern of universities and tertiary institutions have also been abused.

“These universities establish primary and secondary schools, collect school fees from pupils, but place their teachers as staff of the universities that the government pays.

“In fact in many of them, teachers collect salaries as much as a professor. So all these things we discovered and put a stop to it,’’ he said.

Egbule said the law setting up the commission does not give it power to prosecute, therefore the commission is only able to report infractions to supervising ministries.

In addition, he said there had been instances where some anti-graft agencies had stumbled on the commission’s report and opened investigation, thereby recovering government
funds

Related Articles