Aggrieved ex-employees of the defunct Arab Bank and Assurance Bank took to the streets of Lagos on Wednesday in a protest, accusing regulatory authorities of systemic neglect and pushing them into acute poverty.
The
protest was held at the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate office at
the old Secretariat within the premises of Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos Island.
The
senior citizens, representing roughly 1,020 affected staff nationwide, are
demanding immediate intervention from the Federal Government over their
exclusion from national welfare packages.
Despite
a 20-year dispute since the banks’ liquidation, many of the retirees said they
are currently receiving less than N10,000 monthly, a figure far below the
nationally approved N32,000 minimum pension baseline.
The
peaceful demonstration drew a crowd of elderly protesters wielding placards
highlighting their daily battle for survival. Some inscriptions on the placards
read, “Today, today, PTAD must answer us,” “20yrs on: No gratuities and
retirement benefits. CBN, NDIC, why?”, and “After 32 years of service, where is
our 32k pension palliatives?”
The
core of their grievance lies in a perceived “discriminatory dichotomy” enforced
by PTAD, which absorbed the workers in 2019 but has allegedly failed to match
their benefits with those of regular Federal Government retirees.
The
voice of the protest was carried by several representatives who stepped forward
to detail the human cost of the regulatory standoff.
A
protest coordinator and ex-Assurance Bank staff member, Mr Idowu Oshikoya,
said, “We are ex-staff of the defunct Arab Bank and Assurance Bank. We worked,
and we are qualified to be paid pension. Up till now, many of us are here to be
paid; even those who are paid are not sufficiently paid.”
Oshikoya
explained that despite the President’s directive ensuring a minimum pension
baseline for federal workers, their group has been entirely left out.
“The
N32,000 palliative that was granted for all minimum wage… we are excluded. I
can tell you for free that many of us here, our pension is under N10,000. I
don’t know how we can survive with that,” he added.
Compounding
the problem is the lack of clarity regarding the multi-billion-naira physical
and intangible assets left behind when the banks were liquidated two decades
ago.
Another
ex-Assurance Bank worker, Mr Bola Olaniyan, said, “It was the NDIC that
liquidated us, and this has been for about 20 years. For 20 years, some of our
members have not been paid a dime. We wrote to the NDIC, we wrote to the CBN…
they never deemed it fit to reply to us.”
Olaniyan
lamented the rapid deterioration of the bank’s former properties, including
nearly new vehicle fleets, which could have been liquidated to offset the
mounting debt owed to the retirees.
“PTAD
will look us in the face—I’ve got 35 years in the bank—and give us N12,000 as
pension at the end of the month. Some could not even afford transport to get to
this place. Enough of this nonsense… It is either they give us, or we die
here,” he said.
The
protesters noted that out of the roughly 1,020 qualified staff scattered across
Nigeria, many are too frail or impoverished to travel, leaving the Lagos
chapter to spearhead the demonstration. While the workers acknowledged they
were classified as “unsecured creditors” during the initial liquidation
process, they argued that 20 years is an unacceptable period to hide behind
bureaucratic red tape.







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