A gale of resignation has hit the Department of State
Services, DSS, in recent times, forcing the management of the service to
temporarily place a moratorium on further voluntary resignation from
personnel of the service.
DSS OPERATIVES Investigations
by Obestjose at the headquarters of the Nigerian secret police indicated
that in the last 10 months, no fewer than 70 middle cadre and junior
cadre officers had resigned from the service, both from the state
commands and the national headquarters.
While some of
the officers resigned because they got better offers of employment from,
especially embassies of western nations, others resigned because of
unfavourable terms of employment they alleged had pervaded the service
since the take over of the present Director General of the agency,
Mallam Lawal Musa Daura.
One of the staff who resigned
two weeks ago, told Obestjose: “The condition of service is no longer
favourable. Some allowances that we were entitled to were stopped, while
others were cut in half without explanation.
“Most
importantly, operation allowances that we used to enjoy were stopped
without any reason. And we were still expected to put in our best. If I
cannot be treated well while in service, how will my family be treated
well when I am dead? It’s unfortunate that I had to leave after so much
has been invested in me by this country.’’
Another
personnel who said he would also leave in the next few months, told
Obestjose that the condition of service was no longer palatable.
“During
the last dispensation, the service personnel were well motivated to do
their job. We embark on dangerous covert assignments to keep the nation
safe and all that we get in return is insults and suspicion from the
leadership of the service.
Fortunately, most of us are
well trained so our services are needed by those countries that helped
in training us. We cannot be jobless. If you get a better offer, it’s
only natural to move” he said.
Another complain given by
those who left is that “there appears to be no future in remaining.
When I joined the service, it was like one family. There was no regional
or ethnic segmentation.
What we have seen so far is
perception of actions or inactions from the prism of where one comes
from. We were told during training that your competence will make or mar
you. That promise has been compromised .It’s no longer interesting” she
said.
Obestjose gathered that at the last count, five
of those personnel who left were absorbed by the American Embassy, ten
by several banks and other financial institutions as head of security,
while about four have joined oil companies.
Worried by
the steady resignation, the management of the service issued a circular
through departmental heads and state Directors directing that voluntary
resignation by service personnel should no longer be accepted until
further notice. No member of the service was ready to speak on record
and the service has no official spokesman since the last one, Marylyn
Ogar left service.
However, a senior official of the
service who spoke with Obestjose in confidence claimed that the last
dispensation exposed its personnel to unnecessary wealth “which is
capable of compromising operational duties”
“There is no
way the present leadership would have continued with the shenanigans
that was perpetrated in the last dispensation. Apparently the leadership
wants to return the service to its founding vision which is selfless
service to the nation.
It’s obvious that those who
cannot fit in would naturally leave” he said. It will be recalled that
DSS 65 cadet officers of the service who were undergoing training at the
State Services Academy, SSA, in Lagos, including a sibling of the
sacked former spokes person of the service, Marilyn Ogar were asked to
leave in September last year, few weeks to their passing out.
No
reason was given for their dismissal which was contained in a letter by
the Director General of the Department of State Service, Lawal Daura.
A
senior officer of the service who is familiar with the matter told
Obestjose then that their sack was “inevitable” because their
recruitment process was “flawed.”
He explained that
“What happened was that recruitment of most of these cadets did not
follow due process. They were brought into the service by politicians
without meeting the stringent requirements set by the service in
recruiting its personnel.
They were dumped on the
service by politicians through the active connivance of the past
leadership of the service. We are re-organising the service so we cannot
afford to have partisan political moles in our midst” the source said.
The
source who is a senior operative of the service said the process of
“weeding undesirable elements” who found their way into the service was
ongoing. The present leadership of the service is determined to
reposition the service to its professional roles.
There
is nothing personal about the decision of the service. It was a very
painful decision in view of the investment made on them but it was a
decision that must be taken” he had said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
share your thoughts with us