By : SHAZWAN MUSTAFA KAMAL
KUALA LUMPUR : Tan Sri Abu
Bakar Abdullah has confirmed he lost his job as director-general of the Public
Service Department (PSD) as of today, despite the government’s move to extend
the civil service retirement age to 60.
The 57-year-old senior civil
servant of 35 years said he was saddened the government had only notified him
of its decision against renewing his contract in an official letter.
“My family and I are still
saddened by this situation. I did not retire but my service was terminated
effective July 1, 2012.
“I received a letter
informing me of the termination of my service. I think that is enough for me to
say right now,” he was quoted by Berita Harian (BH) Ahad as saying.
The Malay-language paper is
the revamped weekend edition of Berita Harian. It was previously known as
Berita Mingguan.
The paper reported Abu Bakar
(picture) saying that he had opted to retire at 60, but the government’s
unexpected decision meant that his benefits and pension would only be
considered until June 30, 2012.
He has so far refused to
comment on the reason for his termination, and whether it has anything to do
with the PSD’s controversial Public Service Renumeration Scheme (SBPA), which
was axed after protests from within the civil service.
Abu Bakar was previously
tipped to be the next Chief Secretary to the Government, but Datuk Seri Dr Ali
Hamsa has since taken over.
Abu Bakar, whose department
was blamed for disparate pay rises for civil servants early this year, was
widely expected to leave government service.
His termination comes amid a
on-going debate over the civil service’s impartiality, after newly-minted chief
secretary Ali raised eyebrows when he told his new charges that they “should
know better” than to believe the “empty promises” made by the opposition.
The 1.4-million-strong
public sector has been a traditional vote bank for BN but the controversy over
a new pay scheme and attacks on the ruling parties by PR over bread-and-butter
issues may offer the federal opposition a glimmer of hope in the coming polls.
But recent days have seen top government officials go on an apparent overdrive
to protect the BN government they serve.
Apart from Ali’s message to
the civil service, Foreign Ministry undersecretary Ahmad Rozian Abdul Ghani
recently attacked a Canadian newspaper for describing Datuk Seri Najib Razak as
a “false democrat,” and insisted that the prime minister had “an impressive
track record by anyone’s standards”.
A director at Putrajaya’s
efficiency unit, Pemandu, also made a public attack on PR on Wednesday for not
improving the states it governs and focusing on sniping and criticising the
federal government’s efforts.
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