Sunday, January 11, 2026 - The Osun State Government has denied claims that a recent staff audit uncovered more than 8,400 ghost workers on its payroll, accusing the consulting firm contracted for the exercise of inflating figures for financial gain.
The firm, Sally Tibbot Limited, conducted the audit between
June and December 2023. Its Executive Vice Chairman, Sa’adat Bakrin-Ottun, had
told journalists that the state was paying ₦13.7 billion annually to 8,452
alleged ghost workers, describing the findings as evidence of widespread
payroll fraud within the civil service. She said 125 personnel were deployed
for the review and that the firm spent over ₦600 million executing the contract.
But in a statement issued through the Commissioner for
Information and Public Enlightenment, Kolapo Alimi, the government rejected the
claims, describing them as “a subtle blackmail to force a fraudulent staff
audit report on the state.” According to him, those labelled ghost workers were
in fact legitimate employees. “The State Government further proposed to furnish
the company with proof of the existence of each of these workers, if the same
is required,” he said, adding that the firm never requested such proof nor
issued an acceptance letter based on the 1,316 workers who were initially
flagged as unverified.
Alimi said the situation became more suspicious because the
consultant’s fees were tied to how much it was able to “save” the state by
removing personnel from the payroll, alleging that the firm was motivated by
greed. He accused the company of “high handedness” and “deliberate maltreatment
of workers” during the exercise.
He stated that Sally Tibbot Consulting had classified 8,448
workers and 6,713 retirees as ghost personnel without making any effort to
contact them to determine reasons for absence. However, the government’s own
verification showed that 8,015 of the workers were active and only 433 were
unreachable. Among retirees, 5,830 were confirmed while 883 could not be
reached. “The implication of this is that the percentage claim payable to Sally
Tibbot Consulting reduced drastically,” Alimi said, alleging that the company
attempted to claim payment on 15,161 ghost personnel when the actual number was
about 1,316.
The commissioner said the firm later wrote insisting that
payment should be based on all 15,161 personnel, arguing that the contract did
not envisage a re-verification exercise by the government.
Following its review, the government’s verification
committee concluded that the annual savings attributable to the audit were
₦27,077,847.60, far below the ₦1.31 billion estimated by the consulting firm.
It recommended halting salaries and pensions of the 1,316 unverified personnel
and paying the consultant ₦48,740,125.68, representing the agreed percentage of
verified savings.
The government said it would not endorse an audit that would
“further defraud the state,” adding that while it was committed to cleaning up
the payroll, it “cannot in good conscience remove legitimate state government
employees.”

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