http://www.punchng.com/unpaid-salaries-bayelsa-workers-turn-to-begging-for-survival/
April 14, 2016
 
Some
 workers in public and civil service in Bayelsa State have turned to 
begging to survive the hard economic realities in the state.
It 
was observed that some workers, in a bid to cope with the harsh economic
 condition foisted on them by unpaid salaries, had devised different 
means to beg in order to fulfil their financial obligations.
The 
PUNCH learnt that the civil and public servants being owed about five 
months’ salaries by the Governor Seriake Dickson-led administration 
could no longer meet their personal and family obligations.
Many of them were said to be unable to pay their bills, children’s school fees and service their accommodation expenses.
Due
 to their inability to pay transportation fares, most of them could no 
longer attend to go to their work places and church activities while 
persons who managed to go end up begging for fares to go back home.
Some
 of them said they were dying of hunger, adding that they no longer went
 to work because of the lack of money for transport and feeding.
They
 recalled that Dickson had promised to promptly pay salaries of workers,
 but wondered why the governor, who was no longer executing projects, 
could not pay workers.
One of them, who spoke on condition of 
anonymity for fear of victimisation, said he stopped going to work 
because the government had not paid him since November 2015.
The 
source, who is a manager in the government owned Izon Ibe Community 
Bank, confessed, “I work in the state-owned micro-finance bank, but 
since November, I have not been paid. I can’t go to work because I need 
to look for something to do to feed my family. It has been very tough. 
Surviving in Bayelsa State has become so difficult.
“I wonder why
 an oil-producing state like Bayelsa cannot pay salaries. We learnt that
 states like Ebonyi and Taraba, with one of the least allocations, still
 pay salaries. But here, we are working in an oil-producing state 
without salaries.”
Also, two ladies working for the state 
government were sighted on Imgbi Road, on Wednesday, begging passers-by 
for N100 to go home after attending a morning church programme in the 
area.
Though many people turned them down, they leapt up in joy when eventually a Good Samaritan gave the duo N500 to go home.
It
 was, however, learnt that the governor recently approved the payment of
 a month’s salary for the civil servants, but most of them had no 
balance left in the accounts after their banks deducted arrears of 
unpaid loans.
A food vendor, who identified herself simply as 
Emilia, said the hardship had affected her so much that most of her 
customers no longer patronised her.
She said, “Before, my small shop used to bubble with patronage. I would finish selling before 9pm every day.
“But
 everything has changed. I have reduced the quantity I cook, yet I can’t
 finish selling my food even up to 12am. I carry them home. I am even 
considering closing my shop.”
However, most residents have blamed
 the development on the leadership style of Dickson, saying he stifled 
the economy on assuming office as the governor for the second term.
An
 angry resident, identified simply as Emmanuel, wondered why the 
government was claiming that the state is poor when Dickson said he 
opened a dedicated account “where he saved for the rainy day.”
“The
 rain is now falling. People expected the governor to start using the 
savings of the state in paying salaries and rejuvenating the economy. 
Bayelsa is not supposed to be suffering. It is supposed to be a model 
state.”
Commenting on the situation, the Chairman, Nigeria Labour
 Congress, Bayelsa State, Mr. Ndiomu George-Diepre, said the Congress 
was disenchanted with the development.
Though he appreciated the 
economic situation in the country, he, however, appealed to Dickson to 
pay the workers so that they could meet their personal and family 
obligations.
George-Diepre said, “The Congress as usual is still 
on the struggle. Right now, we are on the air, calling on the government
 to pay the unpaid salaries.
“While we understand the economic 
situation in the country and how it also affects the states, we are 
still asking that the government should pay all the outstanding salaries
 of workers, particularly the pensioners and of course, the local 
government workers.
“There are also a lot of scams and ghost 
workers suspected in those areas, and the governor is saying he wants to
 do verification and after that they will pay. But the Labour is saying 
that they should be paid because they have suffered for a long time.”
However,
 a top official in the Governor’s office said Bayelsa State was not the 
only state that was owing salaries, rationalising that some states were 
owing between seven and eight months.
The official, who did not 
want his name mentioned, said, “So, why is Bayelsa State so peculiar 
that journalists want to do a report on it?
“The Federal 
Government is owing. You heard the Secretary to the Government of the 
Federation saying the FG is owing N6bn every month. Is that not 
scandalous for a nation like Nigeria? Is it not more news worthy than 
workers resorting to begging? Check the fact, we are owing just three 
months.”
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