Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State may soon sack 13,200 teachers employed by his predecessor, former governor Rotimi Amaechi.
The
teachers’ sack is imminent follwoing a resolution passed Tuesday by the
state House of Assembly empowering him to sack the board of the State
Civil Service Commission, accusing members of the board of breaching
rules and illegally employing workers into the state service.
The
Rivers lawmakers passed the resolution after questioning the Chairman
of the Service Commission, Mr Ngo Martins Yellowe, on the floor of the
House following petitions accusing the commission of not passing through
due process before employing workers in the past three years.
Yellowe told the lawmakers that the commission under his leadership adhered to the constitution and laws guiding employment into the service.
Observers
of Rivers politics see invitation and questioning of Yellowe by the
lawmakers as a prelude to the sacking of the commission appointed by the
immediate past administration of Governor Chibuike Amaechi and also the
sacking the civil servants employed in the past three years, especially
over 13,200 teachers and others engaged by the immediate past
administration of Governor Chibuike Amaechi.
The
invitation of key agencies by the lawmakers to answer questions on the
floor of the House based on petitions written by some aggrieved members
of the public is following a trend. It all began when the Rivers State
Independent Electoral Commission, RSIEC, Chairman Prof Augustine Ahiazu
was invited to answer questions about how local government election was
conducted. Thereafter a resolution was passed mandating Governor Wike to
sack the commission. Wike sacked RSIEC the next day.
The
Rivers State Judiciary Service Commission suffered same fate after its
members were invited to the floor of the House to be questioned.
Fear
has gripped over 13,200 teachers and at least 400 doctors and nurses
employed by former Governor Amaechi that they may be shown the way out
of service if they fall into the category of workers adjudged to have
been wrongly employed.
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