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The
Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Attahiru Jega,
has said he does not have any plan to embark on terminal leave. This
was contrary to unsubstantiated report that Jega would proceed on a forced
terminal leave on March 1.
But
Jega’s Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Kayode Idowu, denied this saying his boss was
busy preparing for the conduct of the elections.
He
said, “Jega is busy preparing for the elections and you are asking about
terminal leave. Does anyone planning to conduct elections go on terminal leave?
There is nothing like that.”
Idowu
had in an interview on a TV programme monitored in Lagos, on Tuesday, said
Jega’s appointment was not guided by civil service rules and would serve until
the end of his tenure on June 30.
He
said the postponement of the elections would make INEC better prepared for the
elections scheduled for March 28 and April 11.
Idowu
also denied the report that Jega had resigned his appointment due to pressure
from the Presidency.
Idowu
said, “No, that’s (resignation) is not true, he has not resigned. He didn’t
resign. It is a mere rumour.”
Similarly,
the minority leader of the House of Representatives, Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila,
said Jega could not be asked to go on a terminal leave because he was not a
civil servant.
He
said, “I do not consider the Chairman of INEC as a civil servant subject to
civil service rules the same way I, as a member of the House of
Representatives, is not a civil servant. There is a difference between a civil
servant and a public servant or officer. Jega falls under the latter.”
However,
it was learnt that by norm, political appointees had at several times in the
past been ordered to go on terminal leave even though they were not civil
servants.
The
provisions of Public Service Rules 100238 states that officers are required to
give three months’ notice of their retirement from service terminating on the
effective date of their retirement. This means Jega might be forced to proceed
on terminal leave before the elections.
For instance, the tenure of
Jega’s predecessor, Prof Maurice Iwu, was due to expire on June 13, 2010 but on
April 28, 2010, President Goodluck Jonathan, ordered Iwu to proceed on terminal
leave.
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