Pensioners Paralyse Activities At Fashola's Office
Activities at Governor Babatunde Fashola of Lagos office, were
yesterday paralysed by aggrieved pensioners protesting unpaid gratuities
and pension arrears.
This came barely four months after the
state government appealed to the federal government to settle N13.4
billion pension benefits of her retirees in the state.
The
protesters largely retired teachers and local government ex-staff
stormed Alausa Secretariat at about 9:00 am displaying placards with
inscriptions: “Non-review of the pension law for over 10 years,” “We are
tired of unfulfilled promises,” “Except Lagos, other South-West states
have complied with FG directives on the increment of pension,” among
others.
They lamented that the state did not yield to the
directive of the federal government to pay pension increment in 2003 and
2007 to the retirees in the state.
The pensioners argued that whenever they demanded for their benefits the government would plead for more time to pay.
They alleged that rather than pay them, the state government was busy investing her fund in the contributory pension scheme.
The protesters demanded that the state government should make public
the reimbursement it was expecting from the central government.
The South-West chairman of pensioners, Mr. Nojeemdeen Adebayo who spoke
on behalf of others, said: “In 2003, the Federal government directed
that states should increase pensioner’s monthly salary by six per cent
but the state government failed to pay the increment. And 2007, the
central government again directed that pensioners should be paid 16
percent increment.
“But to our surprise, the Lagos state
government turned deaf ear to this. For over four years now, what we
have always heard from the state government is that we should be
patient.
“But we discovered that the patience isn’t yielding
the right solution. This was why we decided to protest to the office of
the governor, to demand for our rights.”
However, addressing
the protesters, Commissioner for Information and strategy, Aderemi
Ibirogba and his counterpart in the ministry of pension and
establishment, Mrs. Florence Oguntuase, assured that government was
working hard to address the pensioners’ grievance.
According to Oguntuase: “We are working hard to ensure that the funds are paid but it is yet to yield the required result.
“What we are doing is to pay all the current liabilities. When a public
servant retires, it takes sometime before the pension begins to roll
in. we are paying pension.”
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