Some graduates from
tertiary institutions who just completed their one year compulsory
national service are stranded at their places of service due to
suspension of the payment of their allowances. The National Service
Secretariat (NSS) in September 2013 deployed more than 70,000 service persons
to serve in the education, health and other sectors for the 2013/2014 service
year with a monthly allowance of GHC247.00 which was increased to GHC 350 in January.
Per the conditions of national service, Service persons were supposed to be
paid their July allowances when the month ended to be followed by the payment
of that of August plus transportation back to their various homes and to
proceed on leave in August. However, information reaching GNA in Cape Coast
showed that payment of July allowances began about three weeks ago but lasted
for only a week, leaving those who later went to the district offices with
their endorsed confirmation of duty forms for payment disappointed. Officers of
the Service could neither give reasons for the suspension nor say when payment
would resume but directed the frustrated service persons to a notice which read
“Payment of July allowance has been suspended by order from the NSS head
office. Allowance to be paid in addition to August allowance.” But a source
told GNA that the suspension was due to investigations being conducted by the
Bureau for National Investigations (BNI) on issues raised by the Auditor
General indicting the Service for failing to account for Ghc83,137 in unclaimed
allowances due service personnel. The Auditor General in its 2014 report had
stated among others that the unclaimed allowances which cover the period
between 2002 and 2005 were not returned to the Consolidated Fund. GNA
investigations in the districts revealed that the suspension of payment of the
allowances had left many personnel stranded with particularly many of those in
the remote areas still at their places of service struggling to survive whilst
awaiting for the remaining two months allowances to enable them return home. The
suspension, however, had affected only those in the government sector since
their colleagues in the private sector were paid their July allowances promptly
with some even receiving their August allowances as well. Some of the agitated
personnel have threatened to stage a demonstration to get government’s
attention. In an interview with the GNA on condition of anonymity, a service
person who was posted to Tamale said she cannot go back to Accra and later
return to Tamale to collect her allowance because she would end up spending it
all on transport. “I have gone for loan from my pastor to enable me stay here
and would repay whenever NSS decides to pay me but I hope it is soon” she said.
Asked what she would be doing while waiting for the payment, she said she was
still at post. Another service person said “it is unfair that the money has
been delayed and no one is giving us any assurance as to when the money will be
paid. We travelled back to the place of posting only to be told payment had
been suspended. What if I didn’t have money to go back home?” “No one is
willing to say anything and this is annoying and worrying. Whatever the
challenge may be at least NSS should come out and tell us something instead of
letting us walk to the offices only to be told it is not ready”, another person
registered his disappointment. In spite of the problem, the secretariat is in
the process of deploying another batch of service persons for the 2014/2015
academic year.
Source: Citi
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