Governor Fashola is one of the most
outstanding governors in Nigeria. Unlike some state governors, he should be
duly commended for his style of governance, his vision for Lagos State, and
achievements. But the recent approval of 10 days paternity leave and six months
maternity leave for civil servants of the state has been greeted with mixed
sentiments within and outside the state. The paternity leave for instance
sounds ridiculous to me each time I think about it....Continue
What sounds even more laughable is the
state Head of Service telling us that the new leave regime is meant to reduce
the stress of the extensive work life of civil servants in the state. Please,
since when did we start attributing words like “extensive work” to civil
servants in Nigeria? My father was a civil servant, I visited his workplace
most times and can categorically say that most Nigerian civil servants don’t do
any extensive work.
I was actually smiling thinking I had
stumbled on a comedy show on TV, hearing her branding civil servants as workaholics
and how the newly approved 10 days paternity leave is needed to boost
productivity. Has moving from one restaurant to another leaving empty plates of iyan and efo riro in their wake become stressful all of
a sudden? I see these guys almost everyday in their different ministries in
Alausa but what I haven’t seen is the same picture of the hardworking soldier
ants the government is trying to paint to us. It will be more believable if the
state comes clean with us that the paternity leave is basically for faaji. Even a newborn baby would giggle
at the thought of a father demanding 10 days of paternity leave to bond with
him/her.
Seriously, how do you bond with a baby
that hasn’t even opened his or her eyes? This is a child that can’t even find
the mother’s nipples. What does a man need 10 days paternity leave for? Did he
have his placenta or umbilical cord removed? Did they perform caesarean on his
pot belly? Did he share in the task of carrying the baby in the womb for nine
months? Most male civil servants in the country have grown too fat developing
breast as a result of idleness at work.
Is this new paternity leave regime
meant for them to stay at home and share in the responsibility of breastfeeding
their newborn babies with their wives? Or are we granting them the additional
10 days paternity leave to also develop hips and complete the full circle of
womanhood? This may sound funny but won’t this paternity law increase the rate
of childbirth in the state, especially in a rainy season?
Our civil servants are not given to doing
much work in the first place. Most times they are never even at work. I went to
one of the ministries to see the permanent secretary about a project I was
working on that needed state’s approval, and on entering his office, I was
stunned by the sight of 15 large booli (roasted plantains) and two full
bottles of peanuts on his table. He almost threw me out of his office when I
jokingly asked if I could join in his lunch. In Nigeria, we already have so
many public holidays, pilgrimages and the three weeks compulsory leave for
workers, and weekends. Is that how we are going to build Lagos into a mega
city? I don’t see the rationale in this new maternity and paternity policy.
Some say it is a policy that is already being
implemented in more advanced societies and we should follow suit without taking
into consideration the peculiarity of this terrain. Yes in more advanced
countries, extended maternity leaves and paternity leaves are no big deal. The
UK for instance grants as much as one year to a woman, to raise her child, with
full salary, if she thinks it is necessary. And a man can take either 10 days
or up to six months to stay with his wife and child. But we also know why this
is very necessary for them.
Unlike Nigeria, no UK grandparent will
come to do omugwo or stay with a couple and help them
take care of their children like a slave for anything more than a week or two.
Because most of these parents and grandparents are still busy chasing blind
dates or searching for love on various online dating sites. Unlike Nigeria, in
the UK there are no house-girls or house-boys who could be used like workhorses
around the house for next to nothing. Also unlike Nigeria, UK men don’t take it
as a duty to act on God’s commandment on procreation with every giving
opportunity like some naija men.
Those applauding the six months
maternity leave for women as a well thought out decision, should also consider
that it may not be in the interest of everyone. Workers of private institutions
may demand implementation of the same policy across board. And most private
institutions can’t afford such luxury. Some civil servants may even see it as a
threat to their livelihood and survival.
The girls with the Lagos State Inland
Revenue (LIRS) for instance won’t fancy sitting back at home for six months
knowing how much of egunje (kickbacks)
they will be missing. The female LASTMA officials will be wondering how they
will survive for that long on their meagre salaries. Another question is, what
happens to those ministries with fewer members of staff? What if a couple of
them got pregnant at the same time? Will they be granted six months maternity
leave all at once? What about their skills when they return from such a long
leave? Won’t it affect their ability to carry on and adapt to new policies?
Will they be provided with extra courses to catch up with their colleagues? I
think three months is okay for a nursing mother.
We also have to consider that salaries will
be paid. Is the government going to slash salaries to cover up the
inadequacies? Are we also bearing in mind that this policy may affect the
already plunging productivity level of workers? Are we not creating more room
for laxity? It is only in Naija that a female civil servant goes to work
wearing a wig and returns home with braids. Isn’t that African magic? Please
never walk into a female civil servant’s office unannounced, because you will
surely bump into her trying on a new attire sold to her by a colleague in the
office. When you walk into some ministries, you will be left confused thinking
you have mistakenly walked into Aswani market, seeing people loitering about
selling all sorts of products. There are always ready buyers at the ministries.
I guess the Lagos State government must
have had a big laugh thinking it has found a solution to this embarrassment by
locating the Ikeja City Mall next door, but did it work?
We always hear of ministries and other
government structures getting burnt in Nigeria and Mickey Mouse always getting
the blames when it is no secret that some of these female civil servants have
makeshift kitchens in their offices. You always see them at their desks drawing
up lists of food ingredients for the interns to buy.
As I end this article, I want you all to join me
in prayers that nobody recommends this paternity and maternity policy to my
state government. Because as it stands right now, I can’t tell which is more
confused between my state government and today’s weather.Credit: PUNCH

What exactly is wrong with this dude? Shmmm
ReplyDeleteThis guy is sick. Something is wrong with him...am serious. Why must he be writing all forms of rubbish? Always dissing others as if he is best...#smallsense
ReplyDelete