The Federal Government has warned chairmen of boards and agencies against interfering with the operations of their respective agencies.
The board chairmen, according to government, do not possess the powers to suspend heads of agencies under them.
The warning came on the heels of the recent suspension of Yusuf Usman, the Executive Secretary of the National Health Insurance Scheme, NHIS, by the board of the agency.
Secretary to the Government of the Federation SGF, Boss Mustapha, Tuesday, gave the warning at the induction of board members of some agencies, including federal universities and medical centres in Abuja.
He noted that governing boards were expected to provide policy direction and implementation of programmes for the achievement of the mandates of the agencies.
According to him, the chairmen should report to their ministries through the permanent secretaries for effectiveness, guidance and policy coordination.
“Some of the issues that have become recurring decimals are undue interference by board chairmen in the day to day activities of the respective agencies, blatant disregard for extant regulations guiding and restricting of board meetings.
“Issuing directives to staff without recourse to the chief executive officer, thereby undermining authority and creating disharmony among personnel.
“Imposing disciplinary measures on chief executives without recourse to laid-down procedure and approval from supervision authorities and using the labour unions as agents of distraction in the parastatals, among others.
“We should desist from these actions and utterances that continue to ridicule the government,” he warned.
Mustapha said membership of the boards was part time and considered as a service to the nation and should be seen as a privilege.
He told the board members to take their appointments seriously, warning that government would not hesitate to enforce disciplinary actions on anyone who went contrary to the terms of the appointment.
Acting Director-General of the Bureau of Public Service Reforms, Dasuki Arabi, described the induction as timely.
Arabi said the programme would target issues concerning weak corporate governance practices in most federal parastatals and increasing disputes between chief executives and board members.
He said the bureau as part of its mandate of reforming and repositioning federal agencies had institutionalised the process of inducting board boards and CEOs into the federal public service immediately they were appointed.
Arabi said the objective of the induction was to enable board members understand their roles and responsibilities and the behaviour required of them.