Osun State Governor, Senator Ademola Adeleke, has officially petitioned the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) to conduct a forensic investigation into a disputed N13.7 billion payroll fraud allegation. The move follows claims by an audit firm, Sally Tibbot Limited, that the state’s payroll was padded with “ghost workers.” In a formal letter dated February 20, 2026, the Governor requested that the anti-graft agency review both the original audit findings and a subsequent report by a state-appointed review committee to establish the truth.
The political and fiscal consequence of this invitation is a high-stakes attempt to clear the administration’s name amidst a growing war of words with the opposition. While the government, through Commissioner Kolapo Alimi, has dismissed the N13.7 billion figure as “APC-sponsored fake news,” the Governor’s decision to involve a federal agency suggests a desire for an independent “clean bill of health.” Establishing the actual state of the payroll is critical for Osun’s fiscal stability, as any verified leakages of this magnitude would represent a massive drain on the state’s limited resources.
Analytically, the controversy centers on a conflict between two internal documents. Upon taking office, Adeleke commissioned Sally Tibbot Limited to audit the payroll inherited from the Gboyega Oyetola administration (2018–2022). However, the resulting 2024 report proved controversial because it labeled several high-ranking officials as ghost workers. To resolve this, Adeleke formed a review committee including labor union leaders whose findings reportedly contradicted the audit firm’s claims. The ICPC’s role will now be to determine which of the two reports is “forensically accurate.”
The impact on “Governance and Public Trust” is a vital dimension of this audit request. By attaching both conflicting reports to his petition, Adeleke is positioning his administration as an advocate for transparency. He stated that his goal is to “get rid of all alleged ghost workers,” but the involvement of labor unions in the review process adds a layer of complexity regarding worker welfare and job security. A transparent ICPC finding could either validate the Governor’s reforms or provide the opposition with significant political leverage ahead of future elections.
Furthermore, this development highlights the ongoing “accountability battle” between the current administration and its predecessor. Adeleke’s letter explicitly mentions that the rumors of a padded payroll were “inherited,” effectively shifting the initial burden of proof back to the Oyetola era. However, since the alleged fraud covers a period extending into the current administration’s tenure, the ICPC’s deep-dive will likely scrutinize current disbursement processes just as much as historical ones.
The long-term economic outlook for Osun State depends on the successful sanitization of its civil service wage bill. If the ICPC confirms the N13.7 billion padding, the state could redirect those funds into critical infrastructure and social programs. For now, the “Ghost Worker” saga remains a cloud over the State of the Living Spring, with the Governor betting that a federal forensic audit will finally put the partisan bickering to rest.




