Femi Adesina, spokesperson of President Buhari last week stated that Parradang was suspended by president Buhari for his alleged involvement in the recruitment exercise that led to the death of 16 applicants. The statement from the concerned officials after the cut...
“Still on Suspension of Parradang of NIS…Setting the Record Straight”
The
recent suspension of CGI David Shikfu Parradang OFR, mni as the
Comptroller-General of Immigration with effect from 21 August 2015, is a
matter that has been generating rhetorics and innuendoes in the
information space. It is a development that has set so many tongues
wagging and the self-styled puritans who are known for prancing on
public issues and hurling uninformed analyses have yet got another
assignment on their hands. But before anybody will be in a haste to take
the Service to the guillotine, nay the allegedly “erring”
Comptroller-General, we have considered it a deserving duty of
overriding public importance to set the record straight and educate
Nigerians on clear position of things. Nigeria Immigration Service has
not been in the news for negative reasons over the years except for
details that will be laid bare in this treatise.
The
NIS as an entity is under the supervision of the Ministry of Interior
through an organ known as Civil Defence, Fire, Immigration and Prisons
Board (CDFIPB). For a paramilitary outfit that should enjoy a reasonable
measure of autonomy, the relationship between the NIS and the above
mentioned supervisory organ has not been rosy. And this can be traceable
to the disgraceful manner successive Comptrollers-General have left
office. Over the years, the major source of conflict is the issues
bordering on recruitment, promotion and posting in the Service. As
earlier stated the NIS is one of the agencies under the supervision of
the Ministry of Interior, through the CDFIPB. However, the NIS has a
legal instrument (Immigration Act 1963, reviewed in 2015) that regulates
its functions. Whereas the Immigration Act and Immigration manual
regulate the daily operational activities of the Nigeria Immigration
Service the Board’s Act takes care of policy matters of all the agencies
in the Board such as Prisons, Civil Defence and the Fire Service .
With
regards to appointment, promotion and discipline, Section 4(2), CAP 12
Immigration and Prisons Board Act, LFN of 1986, states thus: The Board
shall have power –
a. To appoint persons to hold or act in all the offices in the affected Services, including power to make appointments on promotion or transfer and to confirm appointments; and
b. To dismiss and exercise other disciplinary control over persons appointed pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subsection.
Section 4(3) of this Act however set the clear limit on the power of the Board in the following words “The power conferred on the Board under subsection (2) of this section, shall notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any other enactment, include the power to appoint and exercise disciplinary control over –
a. The Director (Comptroller-General) of Immigration; and
b. The Director (Comptroller-General) of the Prisons Service.
a. To appoint persons to hold or act in all the offices in the affected Services, including power to make appointments on promotion or transfer and to confirm appointments; and
b. To dismiss and exercise other disciplinary control over persons appointed pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subsection.
Section 4(3) of this Act however set the clear limit on the power of the Board in the following words “The power conferred on the Board under subsection (2) of this section, shall notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any other enactment, include the power to appoint and exercise disciplinary control over –
a. The Director (Comptroller-General) of Immigration; and
b. The Director (Comptroller-General) of the Prisons Service.
That
the recent letter of suspension of the Comptroller General reference
CDFIPB/IMM/348/Vol.I/54 dated 21st August 2015 and signed by one AA
Ibrahim, Director/Secretary is at variance with the letters and
intention of the provisions of section 4(3) of the Board’s Act is not
contestable. In the letter the signatory claimed to be directed to issue
the letter by a supposedly superior authority which normally should be
the Presidency but signed the said letter for and on behalf of himself.
This is not only curious but quite unusual of Federal Civil Service
practice. The whole exercise borders on someone usurping the power he
never had to issue such a letter especially to a chief executive who was
appointed by the President and Commander-in-Chief.
To
say that the relationship between the NIS and the Board has not been
cordial is simply stating the obvious. In the recent past, especially
during the tenure of CJ Udeh, OFR, (2005 – 2010), the struggle for the
control of the soul of the NIS by the Ministry/Board have been so tense
to the extent that successive Comptroller-Generals virtually struggled
to run their offices due to the overbearing interferences of the
officials of the Ministry/Board in the day to day running of the
service. At a point, it got to a ridiculous extent that
Comptrollers-General of the NIS were requested to submit staff posting
order to the Ministry/Board for vetting or reasons best known to them.
Any staff deployment exercise especially foreign posting that does not
accommodate at least 70% of the powerful members of the Board/Ministry
would not be accepted. Any Comptroller General, who does otherwise,
would be charged with insubordination and improper behaviour to
constituted authority even when it is obvious that the candidates of
these powerful Board members are not in any way qualified for such vital
deployments.
CJ
Udeh’s tenure can be described as the brightest chapter in the annals
of NIS relationship with the Board. And this can be attributed to two
reasons: the then President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces,
Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, GCFR understood the peculiar dynamics
associated with the administration of the military and paramilitary
institutions such as the NIS. He gave the Comptroller-General a clear
mandate to restructure and reposition the Service and went further to
complement same with the appointment of Gen. Godwin Abbe (Rtd) as
Honorable Minister of Interior/Chairman of the Board. The truth of the
matter is that CJ Udeh wouldn’t have succeeded if he were to be
subjected to unnecessary administrative bottlenecks inherent in the
Board.
That
a Comptroller-General of the NIS will be expected to get approval from
the Board/Ministry to deploy staff literally means that he/she is just a
figurehead. That a CGI cannot even effect urgent operational changes
and grant media interview without clearance from the Ministry/Board in
21st century Nigeria is not only laughable, but also at variance with
the provision of the Freedom Of Information Act 2011.
It
is no longer news that the Comptroller General of Immigration, David S.
Parradang, OFR, mni has been suspended because of alleged violation of
extant laws as enunciated by the CDFIP Board. What is news however, is
that the Board is in a hurry to make Nigerians forget the genesis and
the roles they played in the recruitment debacle of March 15, 2014.
However, Nigerians are wise people; they know the story.
They
know that some persons who are still walking free on the streets of
this country collected N1000 from each of the over 700,000 Nigerian job
seekers in the botched exercise of 15 March, 2014 during which 15 young
Nigerians paid the supreme price with their blood and tens of others got
various degrees of injuries. Public outcry rented the whole atmosphere.
The senate of the 7th Assembly waded into the matter but because those
who swindled the young Nigerians and even killed some in the most
shameful recruitment exercise were so powerful, the senate report never
saw the light of the day even up till date. Even the presidential
directives on them to refund the blood money of #1000:00 collected from
young job seekers remained ignored.
The
Federal Government led by the former President, Dr. Goodluck Ebele
Jonathan, GCFR was shaken to its foundations. A rescue mission was
embarked on, upon the realization that some cronies at the Board have
not only swindled these young Nigerians, but also sent them to their
early graves for the job they never got.
A
Committee known as The Presidential Committee to Assist in Immigration
Recruitment was constituted on 26th March, 2014 by the former President,
Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, GCFR. The membership of that committee
includes;
1. The Chairman Federal Civil Service Commission (Chairman)
2. The Permanent Secretary (General Services) OSGF
3. The Comptroller- General of Immigration
4. The Representative of the Inspector General of Police
5. The representative of the DG Department of State Services
6. The representative of the Corps Marshal FRSC
7. The representative of the Commandant General Civil Defense Corps
8. The representative of the Controller- General Prisons
9. The representative of the Attorney General of the Federation
10. The representative of D G, Federal Character Commission
11. The representative of the Head of Service
1. The Chairman Federal Civil Service Commission (Chairman)
2. The Permanent Secretary (General Services) OSGF
3. The Comptroller- General of Immigration
4. The Representative of the Inspector General of Police
5. The representative of the DG Department of State Services
6. The representative of the Corps Marshal FRSC
7. The representative of the Commandant General Civil Defense Corps
8. The representative of the Controller- General Prisons
9. The representative of the Attorney General of the Federation
10. The representative of D G, Federal Character Commission
11. The representative of the Head of Service
The
terms of reference of this Committee as signed by the then Secretary to
the Government of the Federation, Sen. Anyim Pius Anyim includes;
i. To liaise with the Board to confirm the actual number of personnel to be recruited
ii. To assist the Board by advertising the recruitment with a view to starting the process afresh
iii. To assist the Board by processing the application, short listing of potential applicants and conducting necessary interviews for the purpose of the recruitment exercise
iv. To assist the Board by following all relevant laws, Public Service Rules and guidelines to determine successful applicants and announce their appointment into the NIS
v. To ensure that three family members of each deceased applicant from the aborted exercise, at least one of whom should be a female are given immediate and automatic appointment
vi. To ensure that all those injured are given immediate and automatic appointment in the NIS.
i. To liaise with the Board to confirm the actual number of personnel to be recruited
ii. To assist the Board by advertising the recruitment with a view to starting the process afresh
iii. To assist the Board by processing the application, short listing of potential applicants and conducting necessary interviews for the purpose of the recruitment exercise
iv. To assist the Board by following all relevant laws, Public Service Rules and guidelines to determine successful applicants and announce their appointment into the NIS
v. To ensure that three family members of each deceased applicant from the aborted exercise, at least one of whom should be a female are given immediate and automatic appointment
vi. To ensure that all those injured are given immediate and automatic appointment in the NIS.
The
Presidential Committee got into action and advertisement for job
vacancies was placed in various media platforms. CGI Parradang was
neither the chairman of the Committee nor the Secretary but just an
ordinary member whose central concern was to make any useful
contributions that would remove the NIS which he headed from public
ridicule occasioned by the botched March 15, 2014 recruitment fraud
organized and supervised by the Board/Ministry.
The Committee deployed the Computer- Based Test (CBT) option for selection of candidates and this culminated in the enlistment of about 1600 recruits through a much better process than the botched March 15, 2014 recruitment exercise. All these were of junior rank of which the enabling laws of the land (PSR 020103) allow the Comptroller General as the head of the extra ministerial agency to recruit.
The
current fight that led to the suspension of the CGI began when the
Board called on him to cancel the entire recruitment exercise done by
the presidential committee. He told them clearly that he has no such
unilateral power to annul the outcome of an exercise of that magnitude
because other members of the committee need to be consulted. The real
truth about the Board’s position is not unconnected with the fact that
the exercise did not allow members of the Board to impose their
candidates on the CGI to recruit thereby short changing qualified
Nigerians.The Committee deployed the Computer- Based Test (CBT) option for selection of candidates and this culminated in the enlistment of about 1600 recruits through a much better process than the botched March 15, 2014 recruitment exercise. All these were of junior rank of which the enabling laws of the land (PSR 020103) allow the Comptroller General as the head of the extra ministerial agency to recruit.
The Board/Ministry felt that the CGI, DS Parradang, OFR,mni did not carry them along in the exercise. This is not only strange but very illogical because there was no how the CGI would have nominated the representative of the Board to the Presidential Committee of which he was also a nominated member.
The
SINS of CGI Parradang in the court of the Board/Ministry are not
unconnected with his consistent calls for the adherence to proper
procedures and practices in the relationship between the Board/Ministry
and the NIS. On 27th May, 2015, and towards the end of the last
administration, the Board forwarded three different lists of 30
Specially Promoted Officers of the NIS. The CGI raised opposition to the
lists pointing out that his inputs on any of the so called specially
promoted officers were not sought by the Board as required by the
Board’s Guidelines on Special Promotion. In the accompanying letter,
signed by AA Ibrahim, the CGI was directed to issue promotion letters to
the eight affected junior personnel implying the Board’s belated
recognition that the CGI was supposed to be carried along in the first
place. The letter reads in parts thus; “in the exercise of your
delegated responsibility, your are expected to conduct the production
and issuance of the individual officers’ letters of promotion”
Under
normal circumstance and in line with Service Rules and CDFIPB
Guidelines, Promotion and Discipline of August 2012, which provides in
paragraph ‘C’, of page 20, the CGI was supposed to send briefs on any
officer who has demonstrated uncommon character, exceptional brilliance
and conduct worthy of commendation and reward to the Board for special
promotion. The Board neglected this requirement and merely forwarded
lists of specially promoted officers they concocted to the CGI for
release and publication to affected officers.
The
position of CGI Parradang on the special promotion has always been that
when officers and men are unduly elevated far ahead their mates and
indeed superiors without proven evidence of competence or any
justifiable reason (s), especially in a regimented environment,
indiscipline, loss of morale and disaffection would set in and that may
have terrible consequences both to the Service and the larger society.
This position especially his protest letter of 8th June 2015 to the
Board on that matter was seriously frowned at by the Board/Ministry
marking the genesis of the unfolding realities of today.
Again
on matters of staff posting order and deployment the Board would always
want to dictate for the CGI, who to deploy to where and how in a
paramilitary agency under arms where due diligence and professionalism
must be strictly followed in such matters. For instance, in a list of
about 46 officers and men recently posted to Foreign Missions, 16 that
is about 35% of them were the candidates of Comrade Abba Moro the former
Minister/ Chairman of the Board and almost the same percentage came
from officials of the Board/Ministry.
The
Board/Ministry overseeing the NIS as constituted today is nothing but a
group of businessmen in Public Service whose ‘gods’ must be appeased
before any Comptroller General of Immigration or personnel of NIS can
get his/her legitimate privileges. You must bribe your ways to get
promoted as a senior officer and you must be highly connected to
somebody in the Board to be posted to any “juicy” formations in the NIS.
These among others are the evils that Parradang fought gallantly
against the Board. Unfortunately, with their half-truths the Board was
able to mislead the Presidency to secure Parradang’s suspension. The
truth about the rot in NIS is that it has nothing to do with Parradang
as an individual but the NIS as a critical stakeholder in the security
architecture of the country.
In
many serious minded countries, the heads of their Homeland/Interior
Ministries are usually persons with robust military/ paramilitary
background who have acceptable understanding about how to run any
security institution.
Nigeria
must begin to think in this direction because former Comptrollers
General of the NIS such as SA Dange, RC Uzoma and now DS Parradang got
hooked in the dirty traps of the Board/ Ministry. The result is that the
nation suffers for it. That Parradang, a consummate officer and a
trained member of the National Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies
(NIPSS) is alleged to have overstepped his boundaries in a service he
has worked for over 32 years is keenly watching how this suspension
works out. This just scene One, we are waiting anxiously for scene Two.
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