The Punch reports that Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bauchi, Benue, Cross
River, Ekiti, Imo, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, Kogi. Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Oyo,
Plateau, Rivers and Zamfara owe their employees salary arrears of at
least 6 months, citing a task force report by the Nigeria Labour
Congress.
According to the paper, “The report of the Task Force
of the NLC revealed that while some of the states had paid salaries of
workers up to date, they were owing arrears of pensions running into
months.
The states owing salaries or pensions are Abia, Akwa
Ibom, Bauchi, Benue, Cross River, Ekiti, Imo, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, and
Kogi.
Others are Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Plateau, Rivers and Zamfara states.
The
report says that Adamawa, Anambra, Bayelsa, Borno, Delta, Edo, the FCT,
Gombe, Kaduna, Kwara, Lagos, Nasarawa, Niger, Sokoto and Taraba are not
indebted to their workers.
The report paints a bleak picture of
civil service workers across the country. Take Abia for example. The
report states that it has not paid the salaries of workers at the State
Teaching Hospital for nine months.
The state is also said to be
owing workers of the Hospital Management Board eight months’ salary;
Abia State Universal Basic Education Board, six months; Abia State
Polytechnic, five months; local government workers, four months; and
teachers, three months’ salary arrears.
Enugu may have paid the
salaries of civil servants till date, but parastatals are owed 12
months’ salaries and pension and gratuity payments haven’t been issued
since 2010.
For other states, the picture is a sorry one. Osun,
on average, owes six months’ in salary and pension payments; Plateau,
six months in salaries and seven months in pension entitlements; Benue,
five months of salaries and four months of pension benefits; Kogi, four
months in arrears of pension and salary payments; and Oyo, which owes
three months in salaries and between five and 11 months of pension
payments.
States which are likely to owe salaries and pension of
workers well into the commencement of the incoming administration’s
tenure on May 29 include Ekiti, which is already in arrears of state
employee salaries for three months; Jigawa, which owes judiciary workers
a month in salary arrears; Ondo, which owes a month’s salary and
pension payments, while Ogun also owes a month of salary payments but a
mind-boggling 52 months of unremitted pension deductions to the Pension
Fund Administration.
While Zamfara has paid workers’ salaries up to date, the salaries of workers recruited in 2014 have not been paid.
The
NLC Task Force also manipulated Rivers State for owing one month’s
worth of pay and three months worth of pension payments while Kano is
yet to pay newly employed teachers for three months.
The report was silent on the status of Yobe and Ebonyi on the ground that “there was no information on them.”
http://www.ekekeee.com/this-is-the-definitive-list-of-nigerian-states-which-owe-workers-6-months-or-more-in-salaries-look/
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