“Give Us Our Salaries, Not Christmas Clothes”- Ekiti Workers to Fayose

3 Min Read

Ekiti State civil servants have rejected Governor Ayodele Fayose’s largesse saying they would much rather be paid the salaries owed them than Christmas clothes.

This is coming off the back of Fayose’s decision to provide over 20,000 children in the state with Christmas clothes, a move which the civil servants deemed to be unnecessary.

Speaking through the Enlightened Workers’ Forum (EWF), the workers welcomed the directive by the Presidency that governors should clear all arrears owed workers before Christmas.

Coordinator of EWF, Mike Bamidele said workers’ salaries should remain the governor’s priority rather than “unnecessary grandstanding and splurge on frivolities.”

He said: “we are still at a loss why the governor is owing core civil servants five months salaries, workers in institutions on subventions -seven months, and local government workers and primary school teachers -nine months.

“Rather than making sincere and concrete efforts to pay our salaries, the governor is busy distributing Christmas clothes for 20,000 children.

“If he pays their parents regularly, it will be easy for them to buy clothes for their children. It is not the business of government to be buying Christmas clothes for children and this has turned Ekiti to a laughing stock.

“Offering to buy Christmas clothes for children when salaries are not paid is an attempt to play politics with the poverty of the people and turn the innocent kids to pawns on the political chess board.

“We reject this Christmas clothes for children project in its entirety; all we need is our salaries and allowances. Let the governor look for means to pay them so that we can have relief.

“A labourer deserves his wages and the sweat of his labour must not dry on his forehead. We have worked for this money.It is our right and not privilege, the governor must pay our salaries.

“We are also using this medium to call on the Federal Government to investigate how bailout funds, Paris Club refunds, Budget Support Funds sent to Ekiti State were spent.

“We believe if these monies were deployed to payment of workers, all these arrears would have been offset by now.”

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