Buhari
is facing intense pressure from members of the ruling party to sack
heads of parastatals to create positions for party members.
With the agitation by members of the All Progressives Congress
(APC) on President Muhammadu Buhari to replace several heads of federal
government agencies whom he inherited from his predecessor reaching
fever pitch, there are indications that Buhari, who resisted the clamour
to remove them on the grounds that their tenures, some of which are
backed by law, had not expired, may have succumbed.
In this regard, THISDAY learnt that Buhari late last week approved the sack of no fewer than 35 chief executives and directors-general of some agencies of government.
The presidency, which has communicated the president’s approval to the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Babachir David Lawal, is expected to announce their removal this week.
Prior to the approval, Buhari, it was gathered, had resisted pressure for the ouster of some of the heads of parastatals he inherited from the Goodluck Jonathan administration, arguing that their tenures had not expired and in some cases is backed by law.
However, there has been mounting pressure from members of his party to remove the parastatal heads and replace them with APC loyalists as compensation for their loyalty to the ruling party and contributing to its victory in the 2015 general election. A notable case was that of the APC candidate in the April 11, 2015 Rivers State governorship poll, Mr. Dakuku Peterside, and some APC chieftains from his state, who after the Supreme Court dismissed their election petition against Governor Nyesom Wike of Rivers State, met with the National Chairman of the party, Chief John Oyegun recently.
At the meeting, they pleaded with Oyegun to make a case for their compensation at the federal level owing to the sacrifices they had made and the fact that they had been branded “traitors” in Rivers State for siding with the APC.
Some of the affected agencies, according to sources, are the Nigeria Railway Corporation (NRC), the National Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) and the Industrial Trust Fund (ITF), among 32 other agencies.
According to sources, the complete list of agency chiefs would be
announced this week by the SGF who at the weekend asked the supervising
ministers of the agencies to inform the affected persons of their
removal.
source: tori ng
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