By Moki Edwin Kindzeka
Yaounde — Cameroon has started cleaning its
payroll of so-called "ghost workers" who are believed to cost the
country $12 million every month. But the effort appears to also have
impacted legitimate government workers - especially those in the
military - who say they are not getting paid.
At a bank in Cameroon's capital. Yaounde, three soldiers quarreled
with a cashier. They complained that they have not been receiving all of
their salary for a few months. One of the soldiers, Didier Manda, told
VOA that his salary had been reduced from about $500 to $380 per month
and he can no longer provide all of his family's needs.
He said it has been exactly three months without all of his salary
and asked how he and his family can survive? It is not normal, he said,
adding that he needs all of his money.
Another soldier, Fopa Nestor, who had taken a loan from his bank said
what he earned for the month of December, 2013 was just enough to pay
back the loan, so his monthly take home pay came up short. It is
unthinkable that somebody should work and not be paid as agreed to, he
added.
Last November, Cameroon announced that it was intensifying efforts to
modernize its public service and rid it of people who rob the state by
receiving undue benefits.
Officials of the country's Ministry of Finance discovered that many
workers submitted fake birth certificates to get child benefits. Some
continued to collect allowances paid to appointed officials even when
they no longer had positions of responsibility. Officials said claims
were being made for civil servants who had moved abroad or who had died.
Cameroon's minister of finance, Alamine Ousmane Mey, told VOA that
the civil servants who saw a reduction in their salaries or found out
that payments had been suspended, may have been those stealing from the
state and there is now a management system that detects such illegal
payments.
"The different advantages you get is automatically set in the system.
It is not more manual, and doing it like this helps clean the payroll
and those who unduly benefited from some advantages will be prevented
from getting it any more," said Mey.
The minister said the military has been feeling the pinch this month
because it has come under scrutiny. However, he assured those whose
salaries were unjustly reduced or not paid that they could file
complaints for corrections to be made.
"We will address the short comings with regards to their situation.
This will help us establish those who deserve the payment and those who
unfortunately did not," stated Mey.
The government has not officially announced how much the fake
employees were costing the government. But the Yaounde based
non-governmental organization, Dynamique Citoyenne, that collaborates
with the Cameroonian government in addressing governing issues, said $12
million may now be saved every month.
The public has had mixed reactions to the effort to get rid of the ghost workers.
University graduate, Ayeni Paul, who is a butcher in Yaounde, told
VOA that he has hopes of a higher paying government job since huge sums
of money are now being saved.
"People fake documents to claim more salaries. There are many people
not only in the military. They [the government] should go to all levels
and check. They should continue with their efforts to fight corruption,"
said Paul.
Wirkom Martin, 23, a college student, said he has no confidence in the reforms because Cameroonians are very corrupt.
Cameroon has been classified by Transparency International on two occasions as the most corrupt country in the world.
Courtesy:VOA News.
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