Cyprus Updates reports:
an employee of Cyprus Press Information Office (P.I.O), managed to attend work for only 47 days during a 2 year period and get away with it.
The employee under investigation in 2010 showed up to her job for 37 days (followed with 116 days of medical leave) and for just 10 days in 2011. In September 2010 an officer was appointed to conduct a disciplinary investigation and on October 2011 the case was taken to the Attorney General who in April 2012 drafted an indictment which was submitted to the Chairman of the Public Service Commission. In June 2013 after the bureaucratic process finished and after the employee pleaded guilty of the 15 charges she was facing a penalty of 1500 euro was imposed. Finally the employee was to be let go after a decision of the Public Service Commission on 26th March 2014 but to their surprise the employee had already retired prematurely 4 months earlier and now enjoys all pension benefits she would have normally lost had she been fired.
And if all this was not enough, the case has not been closed but has been brought to the Supreme Court because the now ex-employee of P.I.O. is claiming additional 44 days of pay for 2010 which were not approved by the medical board as sick leave.
Nice!
Michael Stepanov liked this on Facebook.
What do you mean??? No overtime???
Alexander Mamchenkov liked this on Facebook.
Bonus?
Welcome to Cyprus! :)
Zakhar Kirpichenko I am pretty sure this exists pretty much everywhere.
I honestly doubt that.
You really doubt corruption in public sector? The cool bit here is that she was caught. :-)
Yeah, that was the unexpected part.
I don’t doubt there’s corruption in public sector almost everywhere, except for a few select countries. I doubt the scale: Cyprus has notoriously overstaffed, overpaid and corrupt public sector, which would be difficult to compete with :)
Andrey Shvachko liked this on Facebook.
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