AFTER many years of toil, in service to the
nation, millions of retirees will be faced
with a pension system that is skewed to
inflict them with pain and regret until their
dying day. Little wonder, pension matters
have continued to spark litanies of woes
and cries of injustice.
Many state governments are unable to pay
pensions. Some do not remit their
counterpart deductions, as required by the
Pension Act, to workers’ respective Pension
Fund Administrators (PFAs). Others, yet,
owe a backlog of pensions and have no
plans or ideas on how to pay. Besides, many
private sector organisations do not comply
with Pension Act regulations requiring them
to partner with workers in contributing to
the scheme and providing how retires would
access their funds.
“When a governor retires, he will go home
with benefits, including house, cars and
what have you. In addition, he will continue
to receive his basic salary and allowance as
former governor until he dies. But the civil
servant, who has worked for 35 years, when
he retires, you will then work out what he
will receive. That is the injustice in the
entire arrangement,” cried Comrade
Osmond Ugwu, Enugu State chairman,
Workers’ Forum and President,
International Solidarity for Peace and
Human Rights Initiative.
Faulting the contributory pension scheme,
Ugwu said it “prepares the retiree to die
before his time, because there is nothing
you are hoping on. This particular policy is
entirely a policy of frustration and founded
on injustice. It has nothing to benefit the
worker.”
He added: “How much is the basic salary of
a worker in Enugu State today? In fact, a
director, all he receives at the end of the
month, including allowances, is not up to
N100,000. If you remove basic salary from
all these, you will discover that the director
is not taking up to N30,000 in a month. It is
80 per cent of that N30,000 that you pay to
the person, and how many civil servants do
you have as retirees in the year?
“Look at Buhari, as President, if he was not
receiving pension as a retired military head
of state, could he have survived all these
years? This is what gives room for
corruption in the system, because if
somebody who is retiring knows that he has
nothing to fall back on, he will find ways to
loot. What a governor goes home with when
he retires is more than what over a hundred
workers will get when they retire. It is lack
of fiscal management in Nigeria that has
brought this problem on workers.”
Recently, the National Union of Pensioners
(NUP) noted that many of its members were
dying as a result of unpaid pensions that
run into billions of naira. The union
lamented the non-inclusion of pension
payment in the bailout received from the
Federal Government by states to pay
salaries. While the union commended the
release of the bailout, it appealed to
President Muhammadu Buhari to direct
state governments to, from the bailout, settle
all pensioners owed.
As many pensioners and unpaid workers
were groaning, the Imo State Governor,
Chief Rochas Okorocha, on Wednesday,
travelled with about 100 persons to Turkey
on what he called an industrial fact-finding
trip. It was the second time in months he
was leading such a large number to the
same country.
Pensioners, under the aegis of Nigeria
Union of Pensioners (NUP) in the state,
meanwhile, have renewed calls for payment
of their over 20 months pension arrears.
They refused to present themselves for
another round of verification exercise
conducted by the state government at the
promptings of the governor, arguing
through their chairman in the state, Chief
Gideon Ezeji, that they had been verified in
2011 and 2013, respectively, under
excruciating conditions. While civil
pensioners are owed about eight months,
retired primary school teachers claim they
are owed 22 months!
Aggrieved pensioners, recently, stormed
Agodi Government House in Oyo State to
protest non-payment of their pension
arrears. Chanting solidarity songs, the
pensioners trooped out in their hundreds,
displaying placards with inscriptions such
as: ‘Bail Pensioners Out Before We Die!’
They demanded the immediate payment of
between 10 and 25 months pension arrears.
Other demands included immediate
implementation of six per cent and 15 per
cent increase for retired local council staff,
payment of arrears of six per cent and 15
per cent pension increase, and immediate
reinstatement of pensioners whose names
were unjustifiably removed.
In a chat with The Guardian, President of
Manufacturers’ Association of Nigeria,
Franks Jacobs, described as “criminal”
refusal by some employers to remit to fund
managers whatever they collected from
workers.
“There should be appropriate sanction on
all defaulters. If they collect money from
workers and failed to remit to the relevant
fund manager, they should be prosecuted, so
as not to jeopardise the scheme,” he said.
Sunday, 13 September 2015
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