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Monday, 12 January 2015

Indian Employee Looses His Job After 24 Years Absence From Work!

Government employees in India can boast of Job security, the company takes the issue of job security so seriously that it takes so much time before an employee could get fired at work.

But when one employee skipped work for 24 full years, India's government finally had enough.

On Thursday last week, India's Minister of Urban Development Venkaiah Naidu fired an electrical engineer who had last reported to duty in December, 1990.

A.K. Verma joined the state-run Central Public Works Department (CPWD) as an assistant executive engineer in 1980. Ten years later, he went on leave, never to resume his duties.

In accordance with service rules, an inquiry was ordered in 1992 for what was found to be Verma's "willful absence." But the engineer was able to keep his job because of his non-cooperation and government inaction, his employer said.

When his file surfaced during a recent review of pending cases that required disciplinary measures, Naidu ordered his job terminated.


Verma's pay was stopped in the 1990s, said P.K. Garg, an executive at the CPWD. His employers have not been able to contact him. "We think he's not in India," Garg said.

India's federal government alone employs more than three million workers, excluding military personnel, according to official data. Various state governments also have massive staffs on their payrolls.
But the country, Asia's third-largest economy, is governed by stringent labor laws that tightly regulate worker firings, according to a World Bank report.
"Government jobs remain the most secured," said Ashish Arora, the chief of human-consultancy HR Anexi. "They are not performance driven either, and therefore many employees live with the notion they will not be fired," he said.
Even so, preference for government cemployment in India has declined rapidly over the past few years, according to Arora.
"Young Indians are increasingly opting for the dynamically-growing and more lucrative private sector," he said. "They don't really care about layoffs." (From CNN)
You dare not try this in Nigeria o. Even while on maternity leave, and sick leaves the fear of loosing one's job rings and beats in one's heart like a clock.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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