Tag: retired

  • Ambode hails retired army chief Dibi for a successful career

    Ambode hails retired army chief Dibi for a successful career

    Lagos Governor Akinwunmi Ambode at the weekend hailed the former General Officer Commanding (GOC) 81 Division, Maj.-Gen. Tamunomiebi Dibi, for maintaining peace in the state.

    He spoke at a reception held in the general’s honour at the Army Officers’ Mess, Marina, for a successful career in the Army.

    Represented by the Permanent Secretary, Special Duties, Dr. Ibirunke Shodeinde, Ambode noted the relative peace and security enjoyed in the state under the retired general.

    Describing Dibi as a principled, calm and committed officer, the governor stated that the retired general always answered his phone calls despite the time of the day, and always rose to the occasion to ensure security and safety of lives and property.

    Dibi, who was pulled out after spending the mandatory 35 years in service, told reporters he had no regrets and no enemies.

    He urged  military officers to leave a legacy for their subordinates, as well as make positive impacts on the Nigerian Army.

    He said: “To my officers, you must be strong and leave some legacies behind to those who are following you.

    “Although I am retired, but I am not tired. I pledge to continue to keep the Nigerian flag high. Also, other serving military personnel must continue to be loyal.

    “As I am being pulled out today, my thoughts are still with the Nigerian Army and the Infantry in particular.

    “I, therefore, urge you all to remain loyal, diligent, motivated and disciplined so as to get the best out of the Nigerian Army.”

    At the pulling out ceremony were his successor at 81 Division, Major General Isidore Edet; the Chief Staff Officer (CSO), Western Naval Command, Rear Admiral Begroy Ibe-Enwo and other senior military officers.

  • Retired headmistress kidnapped in Kogi

    Barely three days after the abduction of octogenarian American missionary, Rev. Phylis Sotor, in Kogi State, a retired headmistress, Paulina Audu, was yesterday kidnapped by suspected gunmen from her home  at Nagazi in Adavi Local Government.

    She was kidnapped between 5am and 6am when the gunmen accosted her at gunpoint while she was about leaving her home for church for morning devotion.

    A source said the retired headmistress was about entering her vehicle when the gunmen  pointed a gun at her and ordered her to enter the vehicle.

    He said the kidnapers then dragged her driver out of the vehicle before taking her away to an unknown destination.

    It was further learnt that the retired headmistress had a routine of attending  church for morning devotion, hence it was easy for the kidnappers to abduct her.

    Police spokesman Sola Collins Adebayo said he was yet to be briefed.

  • Retired civil servants hail Amosun

    THE Association of Retired Heads of Service and Permanent Secretaries in Ogun State has praised the landmark achievements of Governor Ibikunke Amosun.

    The group lauded the government’s relationship with retirees and workers as it honoured the governor yesterday as its grand patron.

    The leader of the association’s delegation to the governor, Chief Oluneye Okuboyejo, hailed the befitting state burial organised by the state government in honour of the first Head of Service and Secretary to the State Government, the late Chief Adedotun Degun.

    Okuboyejo said the government’s  gesture had left a mark in the minds of workers, who are still in active service and those out of service.

    Former Head of Service, Princess Iyabo Odulate, while presenting the association’s plaque to Amosun, said the honour was in recognition of the governor’s  success and achievements.

    Amosun, in his response, praised the association for the honour, describing it as a challenge on him to do more.

    The governor said he would continue to give opportunity to the elder-statesmen to contribute their quota to the state’s development.

    He added that it would be “a better way to learn and share the wealth of experience of those who have been in the saddle of government activities in the past.”

  • PENCOM failed retired judicial workers

    SIR: As far as we the retired staff of the federal judiciary are concerned, the National Pension Commission is a big failure. This is because when PENCOM officials thumb their chest for the so-called success they claim to have achieved, they cover up the fact that staff of the federal judiciary who retired under the Contributory Pension Scheme since 2009 are still waiting to receive their entitlements. Again no matter what success the PENCOM claims to achieve, if there is one retiree who did not get his/her benefits for no fault of his/hers, the PENCOM has failed and we are over a thousand who have not accessed our benefit under the scheme.

    The issues that culminated in the non payment of retirement benefits to the unfortunate retired federal judiciary staff are unbelievable but true.

    When some of us retired in 2010, we were told that it will take only three months for us to achieve our entitlements. We waited in anticipation. After three months and nothing happened, we began to worry. Previously in 2009 we were invited by PENCOM for verification and enrolment which we responded to and completed.

    When after three months we did not receive our entitlements as promised by our Pension Fund Managers, we approached PENCOM and were told that the Budget Office advised PENCOM to stop paying retired judiciary staff because the judiciary under the National Judicial Council refused to contribute the funds required to redeem our accrued Pension rights. Since then the National Judicial Council through its executive secretary has refused to entertain any complaints regarding

    our entitlements claiming that the Pension Reform Act 2004 did not require the council to provide for the fund necessary for the redemption of our entitlements. Recently we were invited to a meeting with the said executive secretary over the issue and he reiterated his stand that Section 29 of the PRA did not require NJC to pay the money required to redeem our money even when it was explained to him reason why the NJC should do so. He claimed that he held a meeting with Director General Budget Office who took time to explain to him that all MDAs are having deductions made from there allocation to fund the bond redemption and that they could not deduct any money from the NJC’s allocation because NJC collects their allocation through statutory allocation. PENCOM even wrote to NJC explaining the same situation, yet the executive secretary, the chairman, who doubles as Chief Justice of Nigeria remained adamant in their refusal to do the right thing to their retired employees.

    In all these, the National Pension Commission as the regulator of pension has done nothing to make the NJC see reason and do the right thing. PENCOM has also refused to allow our pension managers to pay us from our meagre contributions, claiming that the amount does not represent the ‘final balance’ in our account as provided by the same Act which they flouted with impunity in our situation. Since 2009 till date no retired staff of federal judiciary has been paid.

    I implore you to use your investigative machinery to uncover why the federal judiciary, the so-called ‘last hope of the common man’ has been unjust in the matter of its retired staff.

    We believe that some people at NJC have created this problem to enable them help themselves with funds meant for the redemption of the bond. Billions may have been stolen since 2009.

    • Onwukeme Kenneth,

    Enugu

     

  • Retired policeman petitions govt over non-payment of benefits

    Retired policeman petitions govt over non-payment of benefits

    A retired Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), Richard Ogundare, has petitioned the Chairman, Police Service Commission (PSC), Mike Okiro, over non-payment of his retirement benefits 10 years after serving the Nigeria Police Force for 35 years.

    Ogundare, who served between 1969 and 1979 in the Nigerian Army before he was seconded to the Nigeria Police, is also aggrieved because the PSC refused to merge his number of service years.

    The Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar was copied in the petition written and signed by his lawyers, Kehinde Hassan Bamibola& Co.

    According to the petition, Ogundare has not received his retirement benefits since he retired in 2004.

    The petition stated: “We have the authority, instruction and consent of our client to call your attention to the inhuman treatment he has been receiving from your commission after he has duly served his fatherland, Nigeria meritoriously formerly as a military personnel from 1969 before he got seconded/enlisted to the Nigeria Police Force in 1979.

    “Our client informed us with documentary evidences that, he applied to merge his service years sometimes in 2002 and that the application was not recommended. He would have served for 35 as at December 1, 2004, if the merging application had been granted.

    “However, he served the Nigeria Police meritoriously till April 2007 before he was retired from the service. It is so painful and we consider it an act unleashing unmerited hardship on our client, that ever since his retirement, he has not received his retirement benefits. He has been suffering and languishing in abject poverty as a result of non-payment of his retirement benefits.”

    The petition further read that a letter from PSC dated July, 2006 put Ogundare’s retirement date at April 24, 2004 while another letter dated May 3, 2007 with the heading “Retirement Benefits” put the effective date of his retirement at April 24, 2006 with factual affirmation that he was not indebted to the Federal Government.

    “Going by the letter from PSC, he actually applied for merging of his service years comprising the service years with the Nigerian Army from 1969 to the period he joined the Nigeria Police 1979, but the application was turned down. He was made to serve beyond December 2004 till April 2007. Assuming the merging application was granted, he would have clocked 35 years at the service by December, 2004.

    “He actually served the Nigerian Police Force for 28 years from 1979 to 2007. That, the period between December 2004 and April 2007 should be reasonably computed into his service years for the treatment, calculation and payment of his retirement benefits.

    “We hereby appeal to your good office to pay our client all his retirement benefits as he is in great need of finances for his health and other necessities. The ‘dead does not spend money’ and so he should enjoy what he has laboured for while he is still on earth now. We are looking forward to hearing from you that his Retirement Benefits have been paid fully” it read.

    Efforts to get the PSC’s reaction proved abortive as at press time.

  • Plight of retired teachers in Lagos

    SIR: I wish to call the attention of Lagos State Governor, Mr.Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN) to the plight of retired Primary School Teachers under the purview of the Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB). These categories of teachers were those not covered by the new contributory Pension Scheme because they had less than three years to retire when the scheme took effect in Lagos State.

    These teachers retired between 2008 and 2010 but have up till now not been paid their gratuities and accumulated arrears of monthly pensions. In the Civil Service that I know (I served for 28 years), retired Civil servants under the defunct pay as you go scheme are first paid their gratuities calculation on the number of years spent in service, thereafter, monthly pensions commence. This, unfortunately, has not been the case with retired primary school teachers under Lagos State SUBEB.

    In September 2011, however, these teachers were directed to report at the PWD, Ikeja office of SUBEB with all necessary documents which had earlier been verified. They reported amidst great expectations that smiles would be put on their faces by the payment of all outstanding entitlements. It was a great disappointment, to put it mildly, when these teachers discovered, from the Notice Board, that only September 2011 monthly pensions were remitted to an account with Sterling Bank.

    There were directed to approach any of the branches of the bank to collect the one month pension. Although these teachers, have continue to receive their monthly pension since then, nothing has so far been said about their gratuities and accumulated arrears of monthly pensions up till today.

    Another verification of these and other retired teachers took place in December 2013 without a word about their unpaid entitlements. A curious aspect of last year’s verification was the directives to submit two passport photographs of their next-of-kin. In SUBEB waiting until the demise of these pensioners before throwing their next-of-kin into another round of vertification every year?

    My appeal to Governor Fashola is to use his good offices to intervene and ensure that this category of retired primary school teachers are paid all their outstanding gratuities and accumulated areas of monthly pensions while they are still alive. No next-of-kin derives joy in collecting other people’s entitlements.

     

    • Barrister Ayo Olalere,

    Apete, Ibadan.

     

  • ACN chieftain for burial June 7

    The family of the late Vice-Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), Dr. Chudi Nwike, has said he would be buried on June 7.

    The family took a swipe at a report which said the late Nwike would be buried on May 7.

    The former Anambra State Deputy Governor was murdered on April 6 in Delta State by gunmen, who allegedly kidnapped him on March 19.

    Speaking yesterday in Ogbunike, Oyi Local Government, Nwike’s brother, Bufo, said the report was a misrepresentation.

  • Why we retired perm sec, by Oshiomhole

    •Commissioners to be named in Feb

    Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole yesterday explained why the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Environment was retired.

    He said the retired permanent secretary hired out the Kings Square premises to a multinational company for 31 days at a “ridiculous rate of N300,000.”

    The governor spoke at a meeting with permanent secretaries at the Government House, Benin City.

    He urged them to reflect on the challenges of providing good governance in the state.

    Oshiomhole said commissioners would be appointed next month.

    He said permanent secretaries would be accounting officers of their ministries until the appointment of commissioners.

    “I have a duty and obligation to explain why we had to retire the permanent secretary in the Ministry of Environment.

    “I hope that this will guide you on how you manage your own ministries.

    “We are all at the mercy of the Edo people and we would have our jobs secured to the extent that we are able to manage our portfolios in a way our people get maximum benefit.

    “The cost to government maintaining the facility at that square, the salary we pay, the overhead expenditure we have to incur is far in excess of that, which means the government will be subsidising a private multinational.

    “They took over that facility and generated so much waste.

    “I was told that the firm will clear the waste but the firm claimed it paid N20, 000 to clean the waste but the ministry insists it was N200, 000 it paid for 31 days and that translates to about N6, 000 a day to manage the waste generated.”

    The governor said Benin City is still dirty despite the huge investment made to beautify the place.

    “Going round in Benin City you will agree that in spite of all investments we have made, the city has remained substantially unclean.

    “We have refuse in so many places, our walk ways have been taken over by all manner of persons, people are parking vehicles on the roads we have expanded thereby denying our people free-flow of traffic.

    “I have even seen people converting highway to permanent garage where they sell vehicles and you find things such as vehicle for sale as if we have expanded the road to serve as a permanent motor park.

    “Public places like the Oba Ovonranwen Square has been turned to refuse dumps and across the state the markets are dirty.

    “I have met with officials of the ministry of environment to take their job a little more seriously,”

    “We cannot get good governance if the civil service is not ready to play its part .

    “ You are to ensure that government policies are executed, you are responsible for the formulation of agreements, MoUs and to ensure they are also implemented.

    “This year, we cannot do things exactly the way we did them in the past.

    “ We must revisit our attitude to work and take the state as their own by doing their best to keep the state going,” he added.