A
member of the Nigerian Union of Pensioners who retired from the Nigerian Postal
Service, Silifatu Adetola, slumped on Monday as members of the union picketed
the Lafiaji Post Office, Obalende, Lagos.
All Adetola could mutter as she was
being revived by the aggrieved pensioners was that she had not eaten anything
that day.
She went down as the protesters
chanted at the front of the post office. But her colleagues quickly poured
water on her.
She was quickly rushed to a hospital
afterwards.
The pensioners were protesting their
unpaid 69 months pension arrears. PUNCH Metro learnt that
similar protests took place simultaneously in other post office branches in
Apapa and the Lagos Island and some other states.
Chairman of the Lagos chapter of the
union, Elijah Akindutire, said the incident was an attestation to the
sufferings they were subjected to as a result of the unpaid pension
Akindutire said, “The government owes
us 69 months of pension arrears. Most of us came here on empty stomach. That
woman could have died because the government did not see us as important enough
to pay what they owe us after serving meritoriously for years.
“We will not leave the place until we
get an alert that our pension arrears have been paid. Some of us retired as far
back as 2005. Some were paid while some were not. Even those who were paid got
a fraction of what they were owed.
“I retired in 2006 and got just a
little out of the pension the government owed me since then. The same thing is
applicable to other members of the union.”
He explained that the union had
previously given the government an ultimatum which expired on December 11,
2012.
The union said this time around, there
would be no compromise until government paid what it owed them.
The union’s National Public Relations Officer,
Mukaila Ogunboje, said the pensioners were tired of unfulfilled promises by the
government.
He explained that the union had
recorded 420 deaths among its members since they started agitating for the
payment of the arrears.
A civil rights activist, Mr.
Darlington Ajitemita, joined the protesters, even though he was not a retiree
of NIPOST.
He said the government was being
deliberately wicked to the pensioners.
Meanwhile, a 78-year-old pensioner,
Mrs. Enang Ekpenyong, and her other colleagues on Monday locked up the premises
of NIPOST in Calabar, Cross River State.
They insisted that their pension which
was last paid in October 2011 should be paid before the premises could become
operational again.
Ekpenyong, who earns N26,000 monthly
since she retired in the mid 90s, insisted that her pension should be paid or
the NIPOST premises would remain closed indefinitely.
This came just as the Cross River
State Chairman of the pensioners, Mrs. Ekanem Effiwatt, said no fewer than 15
retired NIPOST retirees in the state had died in the last one year.
“I retired since 1996 and I was
short-changed when my gratuity was paid. We have made a series of complaints to
that effect but no one would listen. I have children but they too have their
issues. I was last paid my monthly pension of N26, 000 in October 2011,” she
said.
Vice-chairman of the union, Mr.
Christopher Andem, said the pensioners had no intention of vacating the
premises until their request was met.
“We have nowhere to go; we must remain
here until the management and the Federal Government listen to us and answer
us,” he said.
Source:
Punch
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