The days of duplication and inefficiency in the civil sector, according to Vice President Kashim Shettima, are over.
Shettima made the announcement at the second graduation and award presentation event for 107 public officials who completed training organised by the Federation’s Office of the Head of Public Service.
Shettima stated that the Leadership Enhancement and Development Programme project will aid in the resolution of long-standing issues confronting the Nigerian civil service.
While emphasising the need of repositioning the public service, the Vice President underlined that civil servants must move away from their reputation for duplication and inefficiency.
“This marks a further turning point in the fortunes of the public service and the civil service in Nigeria and the astute work that has been done and continues to be done in requisitioning the service. I assure you that it’s a new dawn,” Shettima said.
“A leader is that visionary and calculated risk-taker who takes his people to where they need to be, even if they don’t know that they need to be there.
“So, the challenges of leadership are changing, becoming more complex and systems of complexity. So, with the rigorous training on leadership that our graduates have gone through over months or perhaps years of preparation, it is my belief that we are unleashing on our public service and our civil service a ready cohort of game changers and change ambassadors.
“The idea behind training a select few is for them to infect the vast majority in a good way with what they have learned and to replicate themselves everywhere. The task will not be easy. The world is watching, and your job is cut out for you.
“There is a critical need to reposition public service or civil service and to get us to begin to attain the levels which we have seen in many countries around the world. We have to walk away from a reputation of redundancy and inefficiency.”
The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, George Akume, stated in his remarks that the LEAD-P program has remained a critical component of the Federal Civil Service Strategy and Implementation Plan 2021-2025.
Akume, who was represented by Dr. Nnamdi Mbaeri, permanent secretary, General Services Office, OSGF, said the initiative demonstrates the government’s persistent commitment to excellence in governance.
“To the 107 graduates, your journey through this program has been one of intellectual rigor and personal transformation. You have been challenged, stretched, and molded into the leaders our nation needs. Therefore, I charge you to deploy your intellect with conviction, your skills with purpose, and your leadership with integrity.”
While emphasizing the importance of human capital in nation-building, the federation’s chief of service, Folasade Yemi-Esan, stated that: “Investing in human knowledge and skills is an urgent necessity for development. This is because people are the main engine for growth and without skills or knowledge and personnel, it’s not possible to achieve the growth, development, and advance rates that nations aspire to.”
“One of the cardinal objectives of the leadership enhancement development program is also to change the mindset of officers and increase the self-awareness and patterns of behavior so that they can also, in turn, influence the mindset of other officers, making them more capable of leading.”