Tag: Solutions

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    ALI: My name is Ali, I am from Plateau State. I have not been put on payroll. I am being owed gratuity and accumulated pension arrears. Please come to my rescue.

    PTAD is concluding computation of pension benefits for pensioners in the North central. You will be put on the payroll as soon as this process is completed. Payment of pension arrears will be made when funds are released and allocated by the Federal Government for that purpose. Thank you.

     

    MUFUTAU: I am Mufutau, a NICON Insurance retiree  since October 1990. I participated in PTAD verification in October 2017. I was later told that others were paid while mine has not been paid. PTAD claims my name was not forwarded to them.

    PTAD: Kindly scan and email your verification slip as well as your duly signed and stamped bank statement covering at least six months before complaint to complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

     

    CHARANCI: I did not receive my pension in the months of April and May 2018. Yusuf Hassan.

    PTAD: Kindly scan and email your verification slip as well as your duly signed and stamped bank statement covering at least six months before complaint to complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

     

    NENROT: I have been verified since November, last year by PTAD in Plateau zone. PTAD has not put me on payroll.

    PTAD is concluding computation of pension benefits for pensioners in North central. You will be put on the payroll as soon as this process is completed. Payment of pension arrears will be made when funds are released and allocated by the Federal Government for that purpose.

    Thank you.

     

    OZEGBE: My name is Ozegbe from Delta State. I retired on October 15, 2006 as a senior foreman carpenter on grade level 7 step 8. I did my capturing in 2016. My problem is nonpayment of federal share since 2006 till date. Thanks

    PTAD: Kindly scan and email your verification slip to complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

     

    KAWONISE: I am Kawonise. I retired from Federal Ministry of Works and Housing, Lagos. I have not been paid my pension salary for April and May 2018. Kindly help me out of this problem, save me from hunger. Thank you.

    PTAD: Kindly scan and email your verification slip as well as your duly signed and stamped bank statement covering at least six months before complaint to complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

     

    BAIYEGUN: My name is Baiyegun, I am an Ondo State pensioner with federal share. I was verified by PTAD during the last exercise and captured into their scheme. My financial benefit was supposed to start from January 1, 2002 but to my surprise when I received bank alert for the payment, PTAD only paid me pension for March, April and May 2018. When am I going to receive the arrears of my pensions? Starting from January 1, 2002. Please I am dying.

    PTAD: Please note that PTAD has compiled the names of pensioners for the next batch of pension arrears payment and is waiting for the allocation and release of funds from the Federal Government for this purpose. Thank you.

     

    FLORENCE: Dear PTAD, thank you for informing me that deduction in my May pension was due to computation correction. But the short payment is more than what it has stated. My federal gratuity too has not been paid since my retirement in 2005. Please I need solution. Florence.

    PTAD: Please scan and email your verification slip and supporting documents to complaints@ptad.gov.ng. This will enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you

     

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    ZEGBE: My name is Ozegbe. I retired on October 15, 2006 as a senior foreman carpenter on grade level 7 step 8. I did my capturing in 2016. My problem is non payment of federal share since 2006 till date. From Delta state. Thanks

    PTAD:  Kindly scan and  email your verification slip to  complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us  investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

    MUFUTAU:  I am Mufutau, a retiree of NICON Insurance since October 1990. I participated in PTAD verification in October 2017. I was later told that others were paid while mine has not been paid. PTAD claims my name was not forwarded to them.

    PTAD: Kindly scan and email your verification slip as well as your duly signed and stamped bank statement covering at least six (6) Months before complaint to complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

    BAIYEGUN: My name is Baiyegun, I am an Ondo State pensioner with Federal share. I was verified by PTAD during the last exercise and captured into their scheme. My financial benefit was supposed to start from January 1, 2002, but to my surprise when I received bank alert for the payment, PTAD only paid me pension for March, April and May 2018. When am I going to receive the arrears of my pensions? Starting from January 1, 2002. Please I am dying.

    PTAD: Please note that PTAD has compiled the names of pensioners for the next batch of pension arrears payment and is waiting for the allocation and release of funds from the Federal Government for this purpose. Thank you.

    FLORENCE: Dear PTAD, thank you for informing me that deduction in my May pension was due to computation correction. But the short payment is more than what it has stated. My federal gratuity too has not been paid since my retirement in 2005. Please I need solution. Florence.

    PTAD: Please scan and email your verification slip and supporting documents to complaints@ptad.gov.ng. This will enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you

    KAWONISE: I am Kawonise. I retired from Federal Ministry of Works and Housing Lagos. I have not been paid my pension salary for April and May 2018. Kindly help me out of this problem, save me from hunger. Thank you.

    PTAD: Kindly scan and email your verification slip as well as your duly signed and stamped bank statement covering at least six (6) months before complaint to complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

    CHARANCI: I did not receive my pension in the months of April and May 2018. Yusuf Hassan Charanci.

    PTAD: Kindly scan and email your verification slip as well as your duly signed and stamped bank statement covering at least six (6) Months before complaint to complaints@ptad.gov.ng to enable us investigate and resolve your complaint. Thank you.

    NENROT: I was verified since November 2018 by PTAD in Plateau zone. PTAD has not put me on payroll.

    PTAD is concluding computation of pension benefits for pensioners in North Central. You will be put on the payroll as soon as this process is complete. Payment of pension arrears will be made when funds are released and allocated by the Federal Government for that purpose.  Thank you.

    ALI: My name is Ali, I am from Plateau State. I have not been put on payroll. I am being owed gratuity and accumulated pension arrears. Please come to my rescue.

    PTAD: We are concluding computation of pension benefits for pensioners in the North Central. You will be put on the payroll as soon as this process is complete. Payment of pension arrears will be made when funds are released and allocated by the Federal Government for that purpose. Thank you.

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    OZEGBE: My name is Ozegbe. I retired on  October 15, 2006 as a senior foreman as carpenter on grade level 7 step 8. I did my capturing in 2016. My problem is nonpayment of federal share since 2006 till date. From Delta State. Thanks

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    LORSHE: My name is Lorshe. My complaint is nonpayment of my late father’s pension entitlement in Nigeria police pension board, I am the next of kin to Late Inspector Samuel who died on October 2010. He retired from the Police Force on June 30, 2004 and was yet to receive his monthly pension. I have undergone several verification exercises to enable me collect his entitlement but to no avail till date. Please help me.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    SAYE: I am a CIPPO pensioner under PTAD. I forwarded my application in July 2017 and was received in October 2017 at PTAD. I am seeking review of my computation on gratuity and pension. But till date no response from PTAD. All relevant documents were attached.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    MUFUTAU: I am Mufutau, a retiree of NICON Insurance in October 1990. I participated in PTAD verification in October 2017. I was later told that others were paid while mine has not been paid. PTAD claims my name was not forwarded to them.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    BAIYEGUN: My name is Baiyegun, I am an Ondo State pensioner with federal share. I was verified by PTAD during the last exercise and captured into their scheme. My financial benefit was supposed to start from January 1, 2002 but to my surprise when I received bank alert for the payment, PTAD only paid me pension for March, April and May 2018. When am I going to receive the arrears of my pensions? Starting from January 1, 2002. Please I am dying.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    KAWONISE: I am Kawonise. I retired from Federal Ministry of Works and Housing Lagos. I have not been paid my pension salary for April and May 2018. Kindly help me out of this problem, save me from hunger. Thank you.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    CHARANCI: I did not receive my pension in the month of April and May 2018. Yusuf Hassan charanci.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    WILSON: My names is Wilson, MDA Education; Designation Director; Grade level 16 step 9; Retired 10th April 2008. My complaints is that I have not been paid my gratuity since retirement neither have I been placed on payroll. I participated in the verification excessive last year. Please help me.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    NENROT: I was verified since November 2018 by PTAD in Plateau zone. PTAD has not put me on payroll.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

    ALI: My name IS Ali, I am from Plateau State. I have not been put on payroll. I am being owed gratuity and accumulated pension arrears. Please come to my rescue.

    THE NATION: The Nation will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper publication every Wednesday for your response.

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    OZEGBE: My name is Ozegbe. I am from Delta State. I retired on October 15, 2006 as a senior foreman (carpenter) on grade level 7 Step 8. I did my capturing in 2016. My problem is the non-payment of my federal share since 2006 till date. Thanks.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    ORSHIO: My complaint is the non-payment of my late father’s pension entitlement by the Nigeria Police Pension Board. I am a registered next of kin to the late Inspector Samuel Adem, who died on October 2010. He retired from Nigeria Police on June 30, 2004, but did not receive pension. I underwent several verification to enable me collect his entitlement, but no fulfillment till date.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    YUSUF: I am a CIPPO pensioner under PTAD. I forwarded my application  last November 7 to PTAD seeking review of my computation on gratuity and pension. But till date, there is no reply from PTAD.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    SADIQ: I am Sadiq, a retiree of NICON Insurance, where in October 1990. I attended PTAD verification last October. I am told that others are paid while I have not been paid. They said my name was not forwarded to them.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    SAMSON: My name is Samson. I am an Ondo State pensioner with federal share. I was verified by PTAD during the last exercise and captured into their scheme. My financial benefit was supposed to start from January 1, 2002. To my surprise, when I received bank alert for the payment, PTAD only paid me pension for March, April and May 2018. Please when am I going to receive the arrears of my pensions starting from January 1, 2002 ? Please I am dying.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    FLORENCE:  Please how far have you gone with my case about pension cut since last May and the non-payment of federal gratuity since my retirement in 2005. Please I need a solution. Florence.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting PTAD to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    TUNDE: Dear Omobola, greetings. I am Tunde. I am a retired professor from University of Ibadan(UI). I retired in January 2008 and have satisfied all requirements to be paid my benefits. I have been cleared by UI and I have been at my PFA. I was told that they were awaiting PenCom’s approval. I have been without any income six months after 43 years of meritorious service. This is no joke. Please help me.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting your PFA and PenCom to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

    OGUNTOLA:Dear Omobola, I am a staff member of Federal Ministry of Works and Housing Lagos. I have not been paid my pension salary for April and May, this year. Kindly help me out of this problem, save me from anger. Thank you.

    THE NATION: The newspaper will intervene by getting your PFA and PenCom to respond to your complaint. Watch out for the newspaper every Wednesday for your response.

  • Afe Babalola proffers solutions to falling education quality in Africa

    In his book titled: “A Paradise for Maggots: The story of a Nigerian Anti-graft Czar”, Wale Adebanwi, a Rhodes professor of Race Relations and Director, African Studies Centre in Oxford University, painted a lucid but agonizing picture of how corruption has robbed Nigeria of its best in virtually all facets of human endeavor.

    Likewise, legal juggernaut and Founder, Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), Aare Afe Babalola, SAN, yesterday recalled how the quantum and quality of education in the colonial era up to 1966 when the Military made an incursion into governance in Nigeria, was a lot better than what it is today.

    In his usual brutally frank, firm, fair but friendly persona, the frontline legal icon and educationist painted a picture of how a combination of lack of true federalism among the states created at the 1884 Berlin Conference having regard to amalgamation of many incompatible tribes, failure of successive African governments to invest adequately in education, failure of African governments to sensitise their citizens that no government alone can fund quality and functional education and poor leadership as well as over bloated population have over several decades combined to render the search for sustainable education in post-colonial Africa illusory and utopian.

    In a lecture titled: “The Search for Sustainable Education in Post-colonial era in African States” in Oxford University, United Kingdom (UK), yesterday, Babalola recalled that in terms of quality, composition and structure, the educational institutions established during the colonial era in many parts of Africa enjoyed the three essential trappings of being autonomous, collegial and self-governing as they were meticulously planned and patterned after elite UK universities.

    Unfortunately, the elite classical model of university education in such model institutions like the Fourah Bay College in Sierra Leone (established in 1877), Achimota College in Gold Coast and Yaba Higher College (both established in 1934), and Liberia College in Monrovia (1833) and the University College, Ibadan, Nigeria among several others, started dwindling at an escalated rate with the takeover of  government by military dictatorships in many parts of Africa with the attendant insufficient funding of education and overconcentration of political and financial power at the centre in most African states.

    He said: “With military leadership in Nigeria came the absolute concentration of powers in the central government. The military constitutions in Nigeria, Ghana, Uganda and Libya, amongst others, accumulated several executive powers to the central government, thereby strangulating the capacity of the regions and states to independently finance and execute education expansion programmes.

    “The added impetus for military authorities to curtail students’ demands and protests as well as checkmate university staff unions led to the rise of governmental control and influence over key decisions in the education sector.”

    Like Steven Kumalo, the main character of “Cry, The Beloved Country” once remarked that  “the tragedy is not that things are broken, the tragedy is that things are not be mended again’”, Babalola, a sure footed authority in educational matters, feels that it will be grossly unfair to continue to blame the dwindling fortunes and quality of education on the colonial masters when African states should rather look inwards and ask salient questions about what successive African governments have done to build and improve upon what the colonial masters bequeathed to them at independence.

    Illustrating with Nigeria, Babalola recalled how Nigerian university system became increasingly less autonomous, less collegiate and highly dependent on government for funding and decision making in the period between 1966 and 1999 when Nigeria was under Military rule with the attendant over concentration of political and financial powers at the centre.

    It was during this period that government became a major stakeholder in education and started meddling in such routine educational matters like the constitution and membership of the governing councils of universities and appointment of key administrative officers of universities.

    He lamented that lack of adequate funding has forced African universities to become local institutions, attended mainly by local residents from the immediate state or region where such universities are located, unlike the practice in those days where the likes of the University of Ibadan, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife and the University of Lagos were like mini United Nations with students and lecturers from all over Africa, Europe and America.

    In his view, Africa can only build world class universities for a world class economy by deploying significant portion of their yearly budgets to revitalizing and supporting their universities, both private and public, stressing that education that does not equip graduates to become independent thinkers, employers of labour, captains of industries and agents of economic change in the key sectors of the economy is unsustainable and irrelevant.

    By investing in entrepreneurial education, African universities can also diversify their income to become more self-sustaining and this is what he has been doing since he established his own university, Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD), in  2009, after his seven-year stint as the Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of Council of the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Lagos. Today, ABUAD’s ventures, according to him, contribute significantly to the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of the university.

    Undoubtedly, his experience as a former Pro-Chancellor & Chairman of Council of the University of Lagos where he was voted Best Pro-Chancellor twice by the NUC and subsequent establishment of his increasingly famous ABUAD, where he has deployed over N80 billion for investments on state-of-the-art infrastructure and ICT expansion since it commenced academic activities on Monday, January 4, 2010, today stands him out as an authority on how a university should be run and how a university should not be run.

    To get out this quagmire, Babalola, canvassed for national restructuring, which would end “the brand of federalism practiced across post-colonial Africa that has stifled innovation and has made it difficult for states, private sector and even universities to attain the required level of financial and structural autonomy needed to drive sustainability”.

    Worried by the quality of leadership in the post-colonial African states, he quipped: “Africa needs a new crop of leaders who are prepared to provide a vision for true federalism. We need leaders who will not sink back to pre-mordial ethnic attachments nor be moored or covert bigotry.

    “We need leaders who will invest their personal fortunes to develop their country. We need leaders who are prepared to make sacrifices and make personal contributions to higher education which cannot be met by government alone as I did in UNILAG.

    “We need more Nigerians particularly the rich ones to invest in education by establishing not-for-profit first class institutions of learning similar to ABUAD.”

    He concluded by canvassing for national restructuring and constitutional reform to correct the arbitrariness that occasioned the 1884 Berlin Conference where incompatible people were amalgamated as nations and the frail and structurally defective federal structures put in place by the colonial leadership. Perhaps the 1884 Berlin Conference and the resultant lopsided partitioning of Africa viz-a-viz the amalgamation of incongruous people as nations must have inspired Walter Rodney in writing his enthralling masterpiece titled: “How Europe underdeveloped Africa”.

    In Babalola’s view, “our current claims to being a federation is not only comical and deceitful, it indeed requires urgent surgical operation. Restructuring is not a call for disunity or conflict; it is a well-informed call for a speedy return to the confederation principles contained in the Independence Constitution which our Regional Leaders negotiated with the British between 1957 and 1959”.

    He equally canvassed for a National Education Fund (NEF) and the commitment of a minimum of 25 per cent of the national budget to education in order to be able to rapidly catch up with the rest of the world in terms of quality education.

    He wondered why ABUAD, like all other private universities, has been excluded from accessing the multi-billion TETfund University Research Funds. TETfund is made up of five per cent levy on public and private companies to support education. Worse still, government also collects custom duties on education and hospital equipment freely donated by foreign philanthropists.

    Besides, Babalola admonished African leaders to promptly address the peculiar African factor of geometric rise in population through reckless procreation which impacts negatively on the yearly revenue of government with regard to government expenditure on other sectors.

    Recalling the story of a 93-year-old Bello Abubakar in Nigeria who had 97 wives and 185 children, Babalola added: “It is unfortunate that while other countries are curtailing population growth, Africans revel in producing children without caution. When China woke up to the reality of population explosion starring it in the face, it pegged the number of children in a family to one. On the contrary, we continue to revel in the unwholesome habit of giving birth to a multitude of children.”

    He therefore called on the governments of African states to make it abundantly clear that there is a limit to the amount of money they can provide for education in the midst of competing areas of needs.

    They should equally stop deceiving the populace that if elected, they will provide free education. This, in his view, is how Nigeria came about establishing several state universities which are nothing but glorified secondary schools.

    • Olofintila wrote from London
  • Expert proffers solutions to domestic violence

    A  call has gone to the federal and state governments to enact stiffer  penalty measures against any form of domestic violence, especially rape, wife/husband battery  and child abuse to stem the growing trend across the country.

    This advice was given in a statement issued on Thursday in Lagos  by a rights activist and Executive Director of the Campaign Against Impunity and Domestic Violence  (CAIDOV ) , Comrade Gbenga Soloki. The statement said only such legislations would stem the growing tide of domestic violence, especially child abuse and rape in the country.

    The activist said the reported cases of domestic violence across the country are frightening and disturbing.

    According  to Comrade Soloki “ the issue of domestic violence is giving some of us sleepless nights, as it occurs virtually everyday and assuming dangerous dimension. It’s a signal that all is not well with our people. Government at all levels must be alive to its responsibilities by enacting stiffer penalties for the offences of domestic violence, especially cases of rape, battery and child abuse.”

    Continuing, he said: “Police brutality is on the increase, but not as prominent as rape and violence against wife or husband.”

    Comrade Soloki further stated that stigmatisation had been responsible for the low rate of the reports of domestic violence.

    The CAIDOV boss commended the Lagos State government for the various agencies and departments  created with the mandate to deal with domestic and other issues.

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    AIKI: I thank The Nation newspaper for the humanitarian service it is rendering , trying to bring people out of pension challenges. God bless the newspaper. My pension problem is non-remittance of pension for five  years. My account was not credited between 2010 and 2015. What can I do? My pension administrator is Stanbic IBTC. My name is AIki and my employer is National Exams Council (NECO).

     

    Stanbic IBTC Adebola: Mr Aiki is required to liaise with the Pension Desk Officer of his institution to include his details on the nominal roll that will be submitted directly to PenCom for the remittance of his outstanding pension contributions between 2010 and Feb 2015.

    His RSA has been credited with his pension contributions from March 2015 by his employer.

    I have called him and advised him of the above information. He mentioned that he has submitted his details this year for nominal roll. However, remittance by the commission is done in batches. We further advise him to be patient.

    Upon receipt of his contributions, he will be notified.

     

    OKOYE:  I am  Okoye. I worked for Embee and Partners Nig Ltd in Abuja for over 10 years. I was disengaged in 2015. I went to access my pension fund with my PFA, Crusader Sterling Pensions only to discover that the company has been deducting money from my salary as pension but did not remit all the money to the PFA. Crusader wrote to Embee to no avail. Embee has refused to comply. I sent a mail to National Pension Commission about what I am going through but didn’t get any reply. Kindly help intervene. Looking forward to your response. Thanks and God bless.

    CRUSADER STERLING ODUKOYA: Dear Okoye, Many thanks, I would revert as soon as possible.

     

    ALABIDUN: My name is ALABIDUN, I have RSA account with Stanbic IBTC Pension Managers. I lost my job in October 2016 and collected my 25 per cent. I have attained 50 years and I am yet to secure another job. I have applied for my lump sum and programmed withdrawal payment. But there is one document that I cannot provide which is my Pay Slip. This is because my previous employer paid us through the bank. I have provided the statement of account which shows how the salaries were being transferred to my account. I want to find out if the bank statement of account is not equivalent to the pay slip, thanks.

    STANBIC IBTC ADEBOLA: We would review and revert as soon as possible.

     

    ABDULWAHEED: Dear Omobola, my name is Savage Abdulwaheed I retired in January 2013 , when I apply for my lump of 50% I was paid 25% which was against the law. I have been trying to get my balance but no way. Stanbic IBTC Pension is my manager. I will be grateful if my complaint is verified. Many thanks. PEN no is 100034050662. +2348063363616

    STANBIC IBTC ADEBOLA: We would review and revert as soon as possible.

     

    MRS EUNICE: Good day ma, l retired from ARMTI in 2007. I am a member of Progressive Co-oprative in ARMTI. Since 2016, my monthly savings of N2,000 only has not been remitted to ARMTI Progressive Cooperative and l want the N2,000; monthly contributions deduction to stop and N48,000 deducted since March 2016 to be refunded. Please help me out. Mrs Eunice.

    THE NATION: The newspapers has communicated your issue with PTAD and is currently waiting for the agency’s response. Do watch out for the newspaper next week Wednesday for your response and subsequently every Wednesday for pension news.

     

    JERRY: I am a NIPOST Pensioner. The military,para-military and civilian pensioners served this country meritoriously in different capacities.It is therefore unjustifiable to discriminate while addressing the problems of these different groups.Both military and para-military pensioners have been paid the backlog of 33 percent pension increment arrears of 2015 and 2016 respectively while the parastatal pensioners are still waiting with bated breath in 2018 for the outstanding arrears of 24 months. The favoured military and para military groups are already pressing for the 20 percent balance which is due to all pensioners anyway.Two of my colleagues recently passed on without collecting this outstanding arrears.This is a great injustice.The minister of finance should please release funds to enable PTAD to pay us and save our lives. PTAD should please step up efforts to make the finance ministry to release the funds.

    THE NATION: The newspapers has communicated your issue with PTAD and is currently waiting for the agency’s response. Do watch out for the newspaper next week Wednesday for your response and subsequently every Wednesday for pension news.

     

    ADEGBOLA: My Name is Adegbola and I am the Chairman of NUP , Nigerian Stored Products Research Institute. one of my members, Mr Hanson Uko, has not been paid either his monthly pension or the arrears of his 33% since PTAD took over about three years ago. All efforts by the institute and Uko proved abortive. He went to PTAD office in Benin with his documents to complain while the office sent an officer to P T A D Abuja twice without any success. Please help us. Adegbola from Ilorin.

    THE NATION: The newspapers has communicated your issue with PTAD and is currently waiting for the agency’s response. Do watch out for the newspaper next week Wednesday for your response and subsequently every Wednesday for pension news.

  • In search of solutions

    In the search for solutions to Nigeria’s lingering internal security challenges, the Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Kpotun Idris, on February 28 convened a Northern states stakeholder’s security summit in Kaduna. “Nation Building: Security Challenges and the Need for Inclusive Approach,” was a follow up to about two he had convened in the last couple of months in other parts of the country. One of the invited guests Senator Abdullahi Adamu, chairman of the senate committee on agriculture noted that the IGP should be commended for traversing the land in his quest for solutions.

    In all, four speakers spoke, but my intervention today will focus on one of the papers, a detailed and comprehensive paper on national security and nation building. It highlighted national security theories and models and showed in practical terms how each operates and where we can situate Nigeria’s security architecture in the mix.

    Before delving into the paper: “National Security, Good Governance and Nation Building: Foundations for Effective and Inclusive Policing” by national security expert, Dr. Dan Mou, I’d like to put in perspective what happened recently because it has direct bearing to issues the expert addressed in his paper.

    That 110 girls from the Federal Government Girls Science College Buni-Yadi in Yobe State, Nigeria were abducted from their school by suspected Boko Haram militants is no longer news. It is also no longer news that there was buck passing between the Yobe state governor, the military and the police.  Governor, Ibrahim Gaidam had insisted that the military and the defence headquarters should be held responsible because they ordered the withdrawal of troops from Dapchi town shortly before the attack and abduction of the schoolgirls. According to him, Dapchi town has been peaceful and never witnessed such an incident until barely a week after the military withdrew the troops from the town.

    “If the soldiers had been on the ground, the attack on the town and subsequent abduction of the schoolgirls would not have happened…” He was quoted as saying. Days later, the military through Col. Onyema Nwachukwu, the Deputy Director, Army Public Relations and Operation Lafiya Dole spokesperson, agreed that it redeployed troops from the town “to reinforce troops in Kanama area following attacks on troops’ location at the Nigerian-Niger Republic border.” But “Dapchi town was formally handed over to the police division located in the town.”

    As I pointed out last week, the Yobe State Commissioner of Police, Sumonu Abdulmaliki, said in a statement that there was no time the military handed over Dapchi town to the police. The critical question to ask here is what went wrong in Dapchi? Dr. Dan Mou’s paper gives us a very clear perspective.

    According to him, there are varieties of national security systems or architectures. First is the captured national security system (CNSS) or architecture: under this situation, it is argued that the dominant interests of a given social cleavage or a set of them in that society have taken control of the state security apparatuses, so that the national security policy and objectives are influenced by the elite group. This group uses the nation’s security apparatuses as the oppressive tool for their economic and political exploitation of others. The interests of the public, defined as whatever is in the society that is for the common good of all, will not be a priority under this system or architecture of national security.

    Furthermore, the information for public consumption will also be distorted to suit the interests of those particular social cleavage elite. Opposition media houses tend to be oppressed with government machinery. A classic example is apartheid period in South Africa, where the government security apparatuses were used for the interest of the minority white people.  It was also practiced in Germany during the rule of the Nazis, led by Adolf Hitler. In fact, it is a common security architecture or system that operates in most nations, in different degrees, including in Nigeria,

    Next is the autonomous national security system (ANSS) or architecture: this is said to exist where the state security apparatuses are operating independently of the dominant elites or classes in that society. National security policy and its apparatuses are more rational and objective in carrying out state policy, implementation and security policies that concern/cater for all its citizens.

    The relatively autonomous national security system (RANSS) or architecture is a position that presupposes that the national security apparatus is neither captured nor autonomous. In most democracies, national security is relatively autonomous because they cater to some extent, for the common good of all citizens.

    There is yet a second broad approach; the organizational determinant categorization of national security systems or architectures: segmentary national security System (SNSS) or architecture; Coordinated national security system (CNSS) or architecture; and Integrated national security system (INSS) or architecture.  The three key distinguishing words are Segmentary, Coordinated and Integrated.

    The eminent national security scholar pointed out that with the exception of South Africa and Libya (during Gaddafi), all other African countries (including Nigeria) have adopted the segmentary security system or architecture even though the degree of application varies from one country to the other.

    “In Nigeria, for instance, under the administration of former Presidents Shehu Shagari and Jonathan administration, the Military and other security Agencies all operated separately with little coordination and integration between them and other Security Agencies.  The same appears to be the case now even with the present President Muhammadu Buhari Administration.  This became more visible in their different strategies and operations regarding the control of the Herdsmen and Farmers conflicts and clashes all over the Nation, but especially in the North Central Zone of Nigeria.  In the event of any security threat, as was the case with the Herdsmen and Farmers clashes, therefore, these Services reacted differently, with little coordination and integration of their efforts.”

    This same SNSS, he pointed out, is what was applied under former President Jonathan that is apparently being utilised under President Buhari in the war against Boko Haram. “…despite President Buhari’s personal commitment, political will and allocation of a lot of resources, Boko Haram is still to be completely wiped out.  The limit of the segmentary national security system or architecture, the SNSS, in my view, is also partly what is hindering the successful conclusions of the military/national security operations throughout the country, including the failure to address decisively the Herdsmen and Farmers conflicts, all over the nation.

    “For instance, instead of the Armed Forces Coordinating efforts, with the Nigeria Police Force and other security agencies, they always order the Nigerian Police Force, even the Police Special Terrorist Units, to withdraw before they start  their own operations, as it was the case with the “Cat Race” operation “Ayem a Kpatuma” in the North Central, particularly Benue State.”

    With this, we can begin to gradually comprehend what actually went wrong in Dapchi. From the analysis, it may not have been the commanders involved per se, but the model of national security in operation in the country. Other lapses he noted with this model including not allow for proper coordination of the national security efforts of the various services and security agencies.

    Equally too, the model does not promote the full utilisation of the national security defence resources of the country.  Instead, they tend to be hoarded by particular services or heads of individual security agencies.  In event of threats or attacks, full mobilisation of the national security defence resources for a coordinated and integrated attack against the offenders becomes impossible. Again, this clearly brings the Dapchi abduction into full glare. How over 100 girls could be abducted without traces is mindboggling.

    Another fundamental drawback of this strategy is that it “allows room for ‘blame shifting’ when it is shown in the case of an actual security lapses that the entire security defence programme failed to yield good results.  This is because the Service Chiefs and Heads of Security Agencies turn round to blame the failures on other Security Agencies or Sector Operations Centres (SOCs); who in turn blame the Commanding Officers (COs) who turn around and load it on the Battery Commander (BCs) who in turn blame Command Post Officers (CPOs), etc. etc.” Our scholar stated.

     

     

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    ADEGOKE: Dear Omobola, my name is Adegoke. I retired from Customs in 2007. I want to know when pension issue of 20.37 per cent being balance of 53.37 per cent year 2010 pension increase arrears from July 2010 to date will be addressed and cleared. Arrears of 33 per cent out of the 53.37 per cent pension increase of July 2010 has been defrayed by PTAD in 2016, leaving the balance of 20.37 per cent arrears from July 2010 to date unpaid. What is responsible for the non-payment? Could it be as a result of budgetary constraints? What has scaled down to pensioners disadvantage the year 2010 pension increase from 53.37 per cent to 33 per cent? Has arrangement reached advance stage towards payment of the 20.37 per cent arrears and when will it be paid? Please PTAD pay pensioners this arrears of 20.37 per cent from July 2010 to date to put smile on our faces, or explain lucidly the true and proper position of this matter to us. Thanks.

    PTAD: In 2014, the Federal Government approved an increment in pensions of the 33 per cent pension payment increase, effective July 2010, and PTAD has paid Customs increment in full. For more information log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

    SYLVANUS: Good day Omobola, let me refresh your memory on the two cases which you promised to intervene. I served Lagos State from 1974 to 1983, when I transferred to Anambra, my home state. I held the post of Assistant Director. When I finally retired from University service in 2001, Lagos State was informed and asked to provide my pension benefits based on apportionment. But there was no response up till April 2013, when I was paid about N1 million as gratuity and pension arrears.

    Now I am owed 48 months pension by TEPO, Ikeja. Under Pension Act 1979, Federal Government took responsibility for pension of retirees in Ondo State, where I entered teaching in missionary schools from 1960 to 1976. On retirement, based on apportionment, a copy of my computed pension benefits was sent to PTAD, but no response up till now. At two state verification centres, no attention was given to me. Please Omobola, help an old man. God bless you. Sylvanus.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Udeh, more information is needed to resolve your complaint. Can you confirm if you have completed a PTAD verification exercise? If yes, kindly provide us with your full name & Bank account details. If not, also provide us with your full name. In addition to the following documents; letter of first appointment, letter of last promotion; letter of retirement; signed and stamped original bank statement on the bank letter head covering from January 2001 till date are required. Kindly email the above documents to complaints@ ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng. You can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed for more information call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

     

    BABATUNDE: My name is Babatunde, I retired from NIPOST in July 23, 2005. My contribution in the Contributory Scheme up to N46,338.92 of which I have applied for, up till now, I am yet to be paid. My pay slips photocopies were forwarded to PTAD in Abuja.

    PTAD: Kindly be informed PTAD does not manage pensioners under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). Please forward the following documents to determine if infact you are a PTAD pensioner; Letter of first appointment, letter of last promotion; letter of retirement. Kindly email the above documents to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng you can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed for more information call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

     

    OSAM: Dear Omobola, my father died since on July 10, 2005. He served last at police mobile force 26 Uyo-aks as a police inspector officer. His name is Okimba. I did all that was required of me for his gratuity to be paid in 2006, but response proved abortive. Later in march 2015, I undergone the second police pension verification exercise and did image capturing at PTAD Maitama Abuja where all necessary documents were successfully submitted as required by screening committee as the next of kin. But up till date no payment. Please help me out of this distress.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Osam, kindly note that your late father joined the Nigeria Police Force on 1st March, 1977 but died on 10th July, 2005. In line with the Pension Reform Act of 2004 as amended, late Inspector Okimba falls under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) managed by the National Pension Commission (PenCom). You are therefore advised to approach late Inspector Okimba’s Pension Fund Administrators and PenCom to claim the accrued pension benefits of late Inspector Okimba.

     

    OWARI: I am an aggrieved man. I retired from paramilitary custom marine department. I was employed in November 27, 1974 and retired in January 1, 2004. I am sending this sms to remind PTAD of the non-payment of my pension. My complain is that, since January 1st, 2004 till date my pension subsistence allowance from the sinking fund both arrears and regular monthly payment has not yet being paid to me. I have been verified and captured on April 14, 2014 at (CIPO) Gwagwalada Abuja an official who issued me my capturing number. And since then nothing is done till date. Besides, I was also verified and captured at pension transitional arrangement directorate which I was also issued with pensioner’s verification acknowledgement form of personal data pensioner number. Please help me. I need my entitlements.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Owari, please be informed your gratuity was paid to you by the defunct CIPPO in 2008 while arrears of monthly pension from retirement January 2007 to February 2017 was paid in March 2017 by PTAD and pay rolled immediately. For more information call 09-462-1700 or log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

     

  • Pension complaints and solutions

    RUMIN: My complaint is non-payment of my late father’s gratuity from police pension. I am the son and next of kin to the late Inspector Akpagher, who died in June 2005. Since then I have not received a kobo as his pension benefits. I followed due process by attending all verification exercises where I provided all neccessary documents and information. But I am yet to receive my late father’s gratuity payment. I am, therefore, appealing to the authority concerned to consider my plight and assist me in getting my late father’s gratuity.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Rumin, please we require more documents from you to enable us determine the pension scheme of your late father. Kindly send us the letter of enlistment into the Nigeria Police Force. Kindly email the above document to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng

     

    IGBO: I retired in 1994. My Federal Pension as at October 2010 was N13, 866. It was cut down to N4,164.00 after a lump sum of N309,000 was paid in December 2012. My pension complaint appeared in The Nation newspaper of Wednesday 13/12/2017. I have made the documents you requested available to the commission more than 10 times. I have made two personal representations at the commission. I was not told what was wrong only to wait since 2010. I was present at the verification exercise in Owerri, Imo State in 2015, yet the delay continues and I continue to suffer. The documents are all there in your office.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Igbo, we have reviewed all the documents submitted following verification and your monthly pension has been re-computed. Payment will be made as soon as funds are released for that purpose. We apologise for the delay.

     

    OWARI: I am an aggrieved man. I retired from para-military Custom Marine department. I was employed in November 27, 1974 and retired in January 1, 2004. I am sending this short message service (sms) to remind the PTAD of the non-payment of my pension. My complain is that since January 1, 2004 till date my pension subsistence allowance from the sinking fund both arrears and regular monthly payment have not been paid to me. I have been verified and captured on April 14, 2014 at (CIPO), Gwagwalada, Abuja. An official issued me my capturing number. Since then nothing has been done till date. Besides, I was also verified and captured at PTAD) where I was also issued with pensioner’s verification acknowledgement form of personal data pensioner number. Please help me. I need my entitlements.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Owari, please be informed that your gratuity was paid to you by the defunct CIPPO in 2008 while arrears of monthly pension from retirement January 2007 to February 2017 was paid in March 2017 by PTAD and pay rolled immediately. For more information call 09-462-1700 or log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

     

    BABATUNDE:   I retired from NIPOST in July 23, 2005. My contribution in the Contributory Pension Scheme was up to N46,338.92 of which I have applied for, up till now, I am yet to be paid. My pay slip photocopies were forwarded to PTAD in Abuja.

    PTAD: Kindly be informed PTAD does not manage pensioners under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). Please forward the following documents to determine if infact you are a PTAD pensioner; Letter of first appointment, letter of last promotion and letter of retirement. Kindly email the above documents to complaints@ptad.gov.ng or access our pensioner’s complaint submission portal at www.ptad.gov.ng You can also visit any of our zonal offices where complaints can be processed. For more information call us toll free on 080-2255-7823.

     

    OSAM: My fa              ther died since July 10, 2005. He served last at Police Mobile Force 26 Uyo, as a police inspector. His name is Okimba. I did all that was required of me for his gratuity to be paid in 2006, but it proved abortive. Later in march 2015, I took part in the second police pension verification exercise and did image capturing at the PTAD Maitama, Abuja, where all necessary documents were successfully submitted as required by the screening committee as the next of kin. But  till date, no payment has been made. Please help me out of this distress.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Osam, kindly note that your late father joined the Nigeria Police Force on 1st March, 1977 but died on 10th July, 2005. In  line with the Pension Reform Act of 2004 as amended, the late Inspector Okimba falls under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) managed by the National Pension Commission (PenCom). You are, therefore, advised to approach late Inspector Okimba’s Pension Fund Administrators and PenCom to claim the accrued pension benefits of the late Inspector Okimba.

     

    DIOKA: My old mother,  Elizabeth, who retired as aprimary school teacher in 1984 (Imo State), is being paid a monthly pension of less than N3000. Can you believe it? What can N3000 purchase in Nigeria today? The pension is not even regular. It sometimes comes only when the Paris Club Fund is paid to states. Please, could you press it on the government of today to do a comprehensive review of the pension law, especially to make state governments  set up pension commissions in their states? Thank you. Chukwuma Dioka, Imo state.

    PTAD: Dear Mr. Dioka, Please be informed that your mother is NOT a PTAD Pensioner, as primary school teachers are not under PTAD. She should kindly meet her state pension office to resolve her complaint. For more information log on to www.ptad.gov.ng

     

    ADEGOKE: I retired from customs in 2007. I want to know when pension issue of 20.37% being balance of 53.37% year 2010 pension increase arrears from July 2010 to date will be addressed and cleared. Arrears of 33% out of the 53.37% pension increase of July 2010 have been defrayed by PTAD in year 2016, leaving the balance of 20.37% arrears from July 2010 to date unpaid. what is responsible for the non-payment? could it be as a result of budgetary constraints? What has scaled down to pensioners disadvantage the year 2010 pension increase from 53.37% to 33%? Has arrangement reached advanced stage towards payment of the 20.37% arrears and when will it be paid? Please PTAD pay pensioners this arrears of 20.37% from July 2010 to date to put smile on our faces, or explain lucidly the true and proper position of this matter to us. Thanks.

    PTAD: In 2014, the Federal Government approved an increment in pensions of the 33% pension payment increase, effective July 2010, and PTAD has paid customs increment in full. For more information log on to www.ptad.gov.ng