PEOPLES GAZETTE
Federal Character Commission (FCC) commissioners have accused the organisation’s chairwoman Farida Dankaka of ”selling jobs” in federal ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs).
The commissioners made the allegations during the House of Representatives ad hoc committee investigating MDAs and parastatal and tertiary institutions on employment racketeering in Abuja
The FCC commissioners who made the allegations included Abdulrasaq Adeoye (Osun), James Dan’iya (Kwara), Abdulwasiu Bawa-Allah (Lagos), Moses Anaughe (Delta), Mamman Alakayi (Nasarawa), among others.
The commissioners also alleged that Ms Dankaka connived with the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) to stop a petition written against her on job racketeering by the commissioners.
“We petitioned the EFCC to investigate her, but to our dismay, nothing has been done. Jobseekers pay as low s N750,000 and as high as N7 million depending on the MDAs where the jobs are being sought. The money from the various accounts is transferred into the main account in Access Bank,” they told the committee.
The commissioners alleged that the chairman often moved her son from one lucrative agency to another.In a swift reaction to the barrage of allegations, Ms Dankaka said, “When you fight corruption, corruption will fight back.”
The embattled FCC chair added, “I did not come to make money but to serve my fatherland. What some of them are looking for is money. Before I came here, I had made my money. Some of them have their reasons for attacking me. For instance, the Osun commissioner is always in my office. What they are accusing me of is not true.”
Ms Dankaka said before she assumed office in July 2020, all the commissioners were “selling jobs,” adding that her refusal to join the fray spurred their anger against her.
According to her, for instance, the commissioner representing Osun bought a property and told the person that he would repay with job slots.
According to her, this necessitated her letters to MDAs that they should not honour any letter from commissioners if they did not see her signature.
The FCC chairwoman said she refused their offer to compromise, adding that she would be the last person to sell jobs and that the commissioners were behind campaigns of calumny in the media and on social media.
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