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OFFICERS SET TO PROTEST OVER NON-PAYMENT OF ELECTION DUTY ALLOWANCE
Officers of the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCS) in Cross River State said they will soon protest over the alleged selective payments of the election duty allowance to mostly personnel at the service headquarters.
The NCS workers, who disclosed this to DAILY POST anonymously, claimed that many of them actively participated in the election duty, but the NCS authorities has refused to pay them.
The said that the election duty allowances was also earmarked for some of them in 2019, but the NCS diverted the funds elsewhere instead of paying it to them.
One of the NCS workers said, ‘’Just like in the 2019 general elections, the NCS authorities selected only the headquarters staff and paid them allowances, meanwhile, other sister agencies paid every staff, whether they are involved in election duty or not.
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‘’This is not just unfortunate but pathetic. It is unacceptable to us that only those at the headquarters were paid even when we were all actively involved in the election duties.
Another personnel said, ‘’ The laws of our country grant us the legitimate right to protest. If we are not paid, we will consider the option of staging a protest.
‘’There is tension right now in prison formations. Even the inmates are not happy over the inhuman treatment of us. There are obvious lamentations and disquiet from officers working in the yards and this has weakened our morale’’
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A senior officer who asked not to be named, said, ‘’I was on annual leave and had to be recalled from leave to assist in beefing up security in the prison due to the general elections. Am I not worthy of the allowance? ? Must we all work at the headquarters?”
He also lamented that personnel of the NCS are treated like ‘slaves’ as they work under harsh conditions without commensurate pay.
‘’They are treating those of us working in correctional centres as slaves.
“We are working in a highly hazardous environment where tuberculosis, chicken pox, COVID and other contagious diseases are so alarming yet no hazard allowances.
‘We risk our lives daily. We have had some colleagues ambushed while escorting inmates to court, yet no incentives.
“A few days ago, illicit items that found their way into correctional centres worth N150 million were destroyed at the national headquarters, now tell me how such illicit acts would stop in prisons when you are paying an inspector of the service N68,000 as a monthly salary and his counterpart in a sister agency is receiving N180,000,’’ he lamented.