Court orders Police to pay rtd AIG Mbu N40m for unlawful retirement

Court orders Police to pay rtd AIG Mbu N40m for unlawful retirement

The National Industrial Court on Monday ordered the Police Service Commission ( PSC), to pay retired AIG Mbu Joseph Mbu, the sum of N40 million as general damages. The payment as ordered by Justice Osatohanmwen Obaseki-Osaghae, was for the unlawful retirement of Mbu before he attained the mandatory age of 60 years.

Court orders Police to pay rtd AIG Mbu N40m for unlawful retirement

RTD AIG Mbu Joseph Mbu ” I hold that the claimant’s premature retirement through a press release on July 2, 2016, is unlawful, unconstitutional, null and void and of no effect”. The court in addition set aside the purported retirement and declared that the claimant remained an officer of the Nigeria Police Force ( NPF) until he attained the mandatory retirement age of 60 on May 10, 2018. Furthermore, the court ordered the defendant to pay Mbu his salaries, allowances and entitlement from July 2, 2016, when he was retired until May 10, 2018, when he ought to have retired having attained 60 years. The judge while delivering the judgment ordered that the sum of N750,000 be paid to the claimant as cost of the suit, stating that failure of the defendant to comply with the orders of the court within 30 days will attract a 10 per cent interest per annum. The court, however, declined the relief of promotion to the position of a DIG and reinstatement sought by the claimant. This, the court explained cannot be sustained as the claimant had reached the mandatory retirement age on May 10, 2018, when the suit was pending. From facts, the claimant, Mbu instituted the suit against the commission over his alleged compulsory retirement on July 2, 2016, when he was the commandant of the Police Staff College. In his statement of facts, he stated that he was born May 10, 1958, and joined the police on Dec. 11, 1985, and had not reached the mandatory retirement age of 60, nor had he spent 35 years in service before he was retired in 2016. The claimant had therefore sought, amongst other reliefs, an order of the court to invalidate his retirement, which he claimed was done via a press release as he was never served statutory notice of retirement. He also sought for an order of the court directing the defendant to pay his salaries, allowances and other entitlements from July 2016 to 2018, when he would have been due for retirement. He also sought for payment of his terminal benefits, N500 million as general damages and N20 million as the cost of the suit. The defendant on its part through processes stated that the claimant was not retired through press release, but that he was pulled out from the force in a ceremonial event. The defendant equally averred that promotion in the force is not automatic and that the claimant did not meet some of the requirements for promotion. According to the defendant, the reorganisation in NPF at the time of the claimant’s retirement followed due process and the claimant was not the only person affected. The court in its judgment stated that although the defendant abandoned its case by failing to show up in court to conduct its defence, the action did not exonerate the claimant from the burden to prove his case. The judge submitted that pleadings are not synonymous with evidence as the defendant was never in court regardless of several hearing notices served. Obaseki-Osaghae in addition stated that the defendant was deemed to have abandoned its case as the claimant’s submissions were not contested. She said that the claimant having proven his case on its strength through credible evidence without relying on the weakness of the defendant, was entitled to some of the reliefs he sought.

“Ortom did nothing unlawful leaving with official vehicles” ― Aide tells Hyacinth Alia

"Ortom did nothing unlawful leaving office with official vehicles allocated to him" ― Aide

Terver Akase, an aide to the former governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom, has cautioned the newly elected governor of the State, Hyacinth Alia over his comment that his principal left office with all official vehicles allocated to him. Akase who countered the governor in a statement on Friday said that Ortom did nothing unlawful leaving with the vehicles and according to him, it was the decision of the state executive council to allow Ortom, his deputy and officials to go with the vehicles allocated to them. "Ortom did nothing unlawful leaving office with official vehicles allocated to him" ― Aide Former governor of Benue State, Samuel OrtomRecall that Hyacinth Alia, Benue governor who won the 2023 governorship election in the state under the All Progressives Congress, APC, had accused Ortom’s administration of looting, alleging that he “met no single car or truck in the government house”. Reacting to Hyacinth Alia’s statement, Akase said “In his latest outing, the governor has accused his predecessor of carrying out recruitment into the civil service without due process; handing to him an empty treasury and looting government vehicles, among several other unfounded accusations,” Akase said. “The present administration may wish to be informed that it was the decision of the Benue state executive council that government officials, including the governor and his deputy, be given waivers to enable them to go with the official vehicles allocated to them. “Governor Ortom, therefore, did nothing unlawful by leaving office with the official vehicles allocated to him. “It is a tradition that an outgoing governor leaves with vehicles given to him. Perhaps we should add that the Ortom administration offered to buy vehicles for the incoming government but the present governor declined, saying that he would prefer to buy vehicles for his administration after the inauguration.” On the issue of sacked appointees and workers, Akase said Ortom’s government followed due process in recruiting the workers. “While we won’t go into a war of words with the governor despite the media trial, it is pertinent to clarify that the Ortom administration followed due process in recruiting the workers whom the present government sacked a few days ago,” he said. “Vacancies were duly advertised in national newspapers and those who applied for the jobs were properly interviewed/screened and the successful ones were given appointment letters as required by civil service rules.

"Ortom did nothing unlawful leaving office with official vehicles allocated to him" ― Aide

The present governor of Benue State, Hyacinth Alia “Promotions were also carried out according to the laid down service regulations. “We expected the Alia administration to specifically point out the areas where it claimed that due process was not followed in the recruitments, instead of making sweeping statements and spurious generalisations.”