Airlines

Over 6,000 Retirees of Nigeria Airways Appeal for Return to Defined Benefit Scheme

Nigeria Airways Aircraft
Nigeria Airways aircraft
Nigeria Airways aircraft

More than 6,000 retirees of the liquidated, Nigeria Airways Limited (NAL) under the aegis of Association of Airways Retired Workers of Nigeria (AARWN) have appealed to the Federal Government to return them to the Defined Benefits Scheme (DBS) like their counterparts in the other sectors of the economy.

The retirees said if they are returned the schemeit would enable them to get their pensions throughout their life.

 Defined Benefit Scheme is a type of pension plan where the pay-out is based on a formula that considers the employee’s employment, salary history and age. The scheme pays out a secure income for life, which increases each year in line with inflation.

 The former NAL workers made this known in a letter they issued, dated May 20, 2024 and signed by the Chairman and Vice Chairman Stephen Onuh and Ahmed Sulugambari respectively.

 The letter stated that the retirees are seeking an audience with the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, to properly inform him of their plight and seize the opportunity to express their displeasure over the attitudes of some of the staff of the Ministry in response to their predicament.

The retirees who reinforced their quest with the letter to the Minister had in December last year petitioned President Bola Tinubu, to press home their demands for inclusion in the DBS, saying the retired staff were until the liquidation of the airline in 2004 by former President Olusegun Obasanjo were enrolled in the scheme.

They claimed that they were controversially removed from the scheme by the government after the liquidation of the airline.

The letter dated December 5, 2023 and addressed to President Tinubu, insisted that pensioners are never paid off, but are paid till they die.

The retirees also argued that the N45 billion severance package, which some of its members benefited from in December 2018 was part of their accumulated 10 years pension arrears suspended by the Federal Government after the liquidation of the defunct national carrier in 2004.

The petitioners comprised those who had retired from the airline before the national carrier was liquidated by the government in 2004.

The petitioners said: “The N45 billion paid to our members were part-payment of our accumulated pension arrears for over 10 years. We were on the monthly pension payroll before the liquidation in September 2004 with a retired letter.

“In pursuance to make sure that the pensioners are paid monthly pension, relevant government authorities have made interventions, directing that the pensioners be pay-rolled into the monthly pension scheme of the Federal Government.”

In this light, the group said that the Senate held a public hearing on pensions matters in 2012 and after thorough investigation, made a resolution, directing the authority concerned to immediately commence payment of pensions to the retirees of the airline.

Apart from the Senate, the group also said that the House of Representatives in a letter addressed to the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, dated February 26, 2013, urged the government to immediately integrate the retirees of the former airline into the monthly pension payroll of the government.

The pensioners emphasised that the House of Representatives through their investigation were able to establish that the Nigeria Airways pensioners were entitled to “pension for life.”

The pensioners decried that since the last payment of N45 billion to the entire former staff of the airline, the pensioners were in four years pension arrears from 2020-2024.

It prayed that the Federal Government should mandate Pensions Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) to handle the payment of whatever is approved for them, while also integrating the existing pensioners before liquidation into the monthly payroll, stressing that this would enable their plights to be solved once and for all.

Also, in the letter addressed to Keyamo, the retirees expressed displeasure over the attitudes of some staff of the Ministry to their plight.

The pensioners accused the office of the Deputy Director and the desk officers in the Ministry of denying them integration into the Federal Government’s monthly pension payroll, despite the interventions from all relevant government agencies.

They alleged that the affected pensioners had over the years written to the Ministry, but the department in the Ministry always denied them progress.

They mentioned letters written on December 18, 2023, September 3, 2015 and April 21, 2017 to press home their claim.

The petitioners alleged that the action of the aforementioned was akin to sabotage and violation of Section 173 of the 1999 constitution, adding that it also amounted to sabotaging efforts being made to right the wrongs of the past administration in the Ministry.

“We humbly beseech you, sir, to consider granting us an audience to get a chance to present our matter directly. We propose to come as a delegation of two, being the Chairman and Vice Chairman of our association,” the petitioners begged the Minister.

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