Tag: Police pension

  • Pension ‘thieves’ framing me – Maina

    Pension ‘thieves’ framing me – Maina

    Embattled former Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team (PRTT), Abdulrasheed Maina, has said that, he is being haunted for stopping N5.32bn which he alleged was being stolen monthly in the office of the Head of Service and Police Pension office alone.

    Maina said, his media trial and framed up allegations were part of efforts by ‘pension thieves’ to stop him from exposing them, which is why he asked President Muhammadu Buhari to thoroughly investigate pending pension petitions, especially as Senator Kabiru Gaya said in an interview that, that the N195bn which he (Maina) was accused of stealing is in the TSA account.

    Speaking through his aide, Olajide Fashikun in Kaduna on Tuesday, Maina who has been on the run said the presidential investigation is imperative to expose the real pension thieves, some of whom he alleged, are highly placed public office holders, adding that such will bring respite to starving pensioners.

    Maina, who said his Task Team saved the country about N282bn from June 2010, when it was constituted, revealed that, the presidential investigation will also expose the sum of six million pounds stashed in accounts in London and the top government functionaries in different offices who are drawing the interest on the accounts.

    According to him, “between the Head of Service and the Police Pension office, the two places PRTT worked, a leakage of N5.32billion was stopped per month. This is what civil servants steal monthly in the two offices out of the 99 pension offices in the country. 43 persons were arrested and handed over to the EFCC to prosecute while 222 houses were seized from them.

    “As soon as Maina was driven to exile before the coming of the PTAD, N35billion was stolen in the Head of Service. The ICPC did not come out with the report. How come no body is talking about these monies? Fashikun asked.

    “In the current media trial where all manners of stories have been published, there has been a lot of distortion of facts and sometimes outright blackmail, all in an attempt to paint the PRTT boss black like Lucifer”.

    “After the biometric exercise, there were 71,000 genuine workers in the police pension office who needed N826million to pay them unlike N5.3billion appropriated for them annually. They were pocketing N4.2billion yearly. They devised several ingenious ways to pull these cash out. They pull out an average of N300million daily Monday to Friday. There are bank alerts to substantiate these assertions.

    “There is a particular person who has 69 cloned versions of his name on the pay roll. Bank officials were in cohort. Names of dead pensioners were ‘exhumed’ from the dead and paid pension. Accounts were created with fictitious names.”

     

    Speaking further, Maina’s aide stressed “there has been a lot of deliberate cover in a well written script to give Maina a bad name. Some of those who worked in the PRTT do ‘kabu-kabu’ to augment their survival. They were severely starved of funds, Maina’s PRTT was a clog in the wheel of so many who were looting the pensioner’s funds.

    “Maina’s PRTT was brought in to sanitise a very corrupt pension system. It was the success of his pension system in the Ministry of Interior that brought him to the PRTT. Emerging evidence has shown that Maina is just a victim of corruption fighting back.

    “The then Senate Committee in a bid to crucify Maina did the hatchet job, when they told the Nigerians that, he stole N195billion. Meanwhile, on 13th April 2016, former Kano Governor, Senator Kabiru Gaya, told The Sun newspaper in an interview that that money was never missing. So, why is he being tried for the money that is now confirmed not missing? According to the structure of the task force, Maina like none of them therein never had access to the pension fund and could never have taken one Naira lest over N2 billion.

    “Former finance minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala during a Senate meeting said that Maina had no contact with funds and revealed how she froze the account where the monies recovered by Maina’s committee was kept and how she transferred the funds to the CBN. So, why will the EFCC continue to hound a man for an offence which they know he is innocent of? Maina was only the head of the team which comprised of EFCC, ICPC, DSS, NIA, office of Accountant General, Auditor General, Public Complaints Commission etc. He was the only civilian in the Task Team.

    “Maina was just a victim of high power play of some powerful individuals in high places. So, for three years, Maina suffered ‘media trial’, where he has found guilty several times on the pages of newspaper.

    “Despite the several facts presented before the Senate committee during the hearing, the committee chose to ignore the facts, instead, they threatened the then President Goodluck Jonathan, following which Maina was shot with five bullets wounds on the side glass of the bullet proof car Jonathan gave him”, he said.

    Mr. Maina said he had “verifiable” evidence the federal pension scheme was returning to “the looting era” which his team set out to end, with an alleged 98% of pensioners denied their benefits since November, 2012.

  • PTAD boss: N29b police pension cash in Fed Govt’s treasury

    PTAD boss: N29b police pension cash in Fed Govt’s treasury

    THE N29 billion recovered from the police pension fund has been returned to the Federal Government’s treasury, the House Committee on Police Affairs was told yesterday.

    Director-General of Pension Transition Administrative Directorate (PTAD) Nellie Mayshak said this while speaking at an interactive session with the Haliru Jika-led committee.

    She said though the police pension scheme was adequately funded by previous administrations, its former managers misappropriated the excessive fund through inclusion of ghost pensioners.

    The PTAD boss noted that the agency, which was saddled with the responsibility of handling old pension scheme of various federal agencies, civil service, parastatals, including police during the last nationwide verification exercise, discovered about 2,800 ghost pensioners from the 18,000 officers on the pension payroll.

    She added that of the additional 16,000 names of pensioners not captured in the pension scheme submitted to PTAD, only 3,128 appeared during the verification exercise.

    Mayshak said civil service pensioners were 105,000 and 13,000 pensioners were from Customs, Immigration and Prisons.

    The PTAD director-general said the issue of fraud in the pension administration was a bygone, adding that a report of authentic federal pensioners would be submitted to National Assembly and other relevant authorities.

    Fraud, she said, was the major challenge confronting the pension scheme.

    The Interior Minister, Abdulrahman Dambazzu, said the report on the merger of the Ministry of Interior and Police Affairs has been passed to the Head of Service of the Federation for onward transmission to the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

    But the lawmakers, reacting to the minister’s presentation, expressed concern over the delay in the payment of compensation to families of deceased police personnel as well as poor response to distress calls.

    They expressed worry over extra-judicial killings and poor welfare of police personnel and their families.

    Police Service Commission (PSC) Chairman Mike Okiro said for effective policing, the country requires about 425,000 policemen.

    His words: “With the current staff disposition of 286,901, additional 119,421 personnel is required.”

    According to him, the commission was preparing for the recruitment of the 10,000 personnel announced by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The Commission, Okiro said, recruited 21,228 personnel between 2011 and 2012, adding that 21,353 personnel were lost to retirement, resignation, dismissal and death between 2010 and 2015.

     

  • ‘N29bn recovered Police pension fund in FG coffer’

    ‘N29bn recovered Police pension fund in FG coffer’

    The N29 billion recovered from the Police pension fund has been returned back to Government’s coffer, the House Committee on Police Affairs was told Tuesday.

    The Director-General of Pension Transition Administrative Directorate (PTAD), Nellie Mayshak, made the revelation while speaking at an interactive session with the Hon. Haliru Jika – headed House committee.

    According to her, though the police pension was adequately funded by previous administrations, the previous police pension managers misappropriated the excessive fund through inclusion of ghost pensioners.

    She however noted that the agency which was saddled with the responsibility of handling old pension scheme of various federal agencies, civil service, parastatals including police during the last nationwide verification exercise for the police,

    She said about 2,800 ghost pensioners were discovered out of the 18,000 officers on the pension payroll, and that of the additional 16,000 names of pensioners not captured in the pension scheme submitted to PTAD, only 3,128 appeared during the verification exercise.

    While giving a further breakdown, she said civil service pensioners were 105,000 while 13,000 pensioners were from Customs, Immigration and Prisons.

    The PTAD Director- General said the issue of fraud in the pension administration is a bygone, adding that a report of authentic federal pensioners would be submitted to National Assembly and other relevant authorities.

    Fraud, Mayshak said, was the major challenge confronting the pension scheme.

    Interior Minister, Abdulrahman Dambazzu, revealed that the report on the merger of the Ministry of Interior and Police Affairs has been passed to the Head of Service of the Federation for onward transmission to the Federal Executive Council (FEC).

    Lawmakers, while reacting to the Minister’s presentation, expressed concern over the delay in the payment of compensation to families of deceased police personnel as well as poor response to distress calls.

    They also expressed worry over extra-judicial killings and poor welfare of police personnel and their families.

    Mike Okiro, Police Service Commission (PSC) Chairman said for effective policing, the country requires about 425,000 policemen.

    His words: “With the current staff disposition of 286,901, additional 119,421 personnel is required.”

    According to him, there is an ongoing preparation for the recruitment of the 10,000 personnel announced by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The Commission, Okiro said, recruited 21,228 personnel between 2011 and 2012, while 21,353 personnel were lost to retirement, resignation, dismissal and death between 2010 and 2015.

  • EFCC re-arrests police pension chief

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission on Tuesday re- arrested the director of Police Pension Unit, John Yusuf.

    Yusuf was released by an High Court in Abuja on Monday after paying N750, 000 fine for conniving with others to defraud the police pension office of N27.2bn.

    Reports quoting the EFCC spokesman, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said Yusuf was re-arrested because there were several other cases against him.

    The pension boss, according to Uwujaren, would be re-arraigned in court to face new charges.