Ghost workers payroll : Finance Minister lauds PICA, EFCC for arraigning 9 suspects

The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, has commended the Presidential Initiative on Continuous Audit (PICA) for detecting pay roll fraud by nine civil servants suspected to be involved in siphoning public funds by inserting fake workers in the payroll of Federal Ministries.
The nine suspects were on Wednesday, arraigned before an Abuja High Court for prosecution by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for allegedly conspiring and inserting fake workers in the payrolls of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources.
In a statement by the Director of Information Salisu Na’Inna Dambatta, the finance ministry stated that the nine suspects charged were Usman Aliyu Dayo, Osunlope Opeyemi, Johnson Adedokun, Ojeifo Robert Sylvanus, Oyebade Ebenezer Ayodeji and Florence Olaolu Dada. Others were Olaolu Haruna Dada, Blessing Ejeh and Aderibigbe Isaac Taiwo.
But when the 15 count charges were read to the accused persons, they pleaded not guilty to the offence
Lawyers to the accused later applied for bail on behalf of their clients.
The charge sheet filed by the EFCC indicated that the alleged fraud was committed at various times between 2011 and 2015.
Adeosun described their arraignment as “a welcome development that has given further credibility to the war on corruption by the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari.”
According yo the minister, the nine suspects who are now standing trial, were alleged to have connived and added ghost workers on the payrolls of the Federal Ministry of Water Resources and siphoned N338,577,678.78 in the name of the non-existent workers.
Adeosun vowed that the Federal Government through the Ministry of Finance and the Presidential Initiative on Continuous Audit would intensify efforts to rid the public service of fraudulent persons.
The Daily Times recalls that the Presidential Initiative on Continuous Audit was instituted by the President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration in 2016 to strengthen the controls over personnel and pension costs.