The retired police officers demanded that the federal government remove them from the contributory pension plan while holding placards and standing near the National Assembly’s Mopol gate entrance.
Under the auspices of the contributory pension programme, retired police officers stormed the National Assembly yesterday in protest of the federal government’s nonpayment of their pensions for several months.
The retired police officers demanded that the federal government remove them from the contributory pension plan while holding placards and standing near the National Assembly’s Mopol gate entrance.
A few of the signs included things like, “CPS is a death sentence against police,” “Police officers are dying in penury under the contributory pension scheme,” and “NPF pension defrauding police retirees, SOS.”
Recall that retired officers demanding their pension payments stormed the National Assembly in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, in September 2021. They represented roughly 27 states.
The retirees, representing various state chapters, however, lamented the severe hardships they faced due to the failure of the National Pension Commission to pay their entitlements.
Addressing journalists during the protest, the National Coordinator and a retired Superintendent of Police, Christopher Effiong, explained that they were at the National Assembly complex to let the world know that their agitation had been with the legislature.
Offiong, who is also the chairman of Cross River State chapter of police retirees, explained that the agitation had been with the National Assembly for the past three years, saying “we agitated that we should be exempted from contributing pension scheme such as their counterparts from other security agencies like armed forces and other intelligence communities.
”This scheme has sent a lot of our retirees to the grave. We have a bill here, bill to exit contributing pension scheme. That bill had been here for over two years, it has passed first reading, second reading, we came here for public hearing, but till today, nothing is happening, not is done.
”If it is conspiracy by the Nigerian government to kill us, then let us die here. We are dying, we cannot feed our family.”
But in a swift reaction, the Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Police Affairs, Senator Yinusa Akintunde, APC, Oyo Central, who addressed the protesters on behalf of the Senate, disclosed that the National Assembly was currently holding a meeting with Police authorities to resolve the problem.