The retirees staged the
protest against the Benue State government over alleged unpaid entitlements and
gratuity which spanned 11 months.
Two pensioners of the Benue
State Civil Service slumped on Wednesday during a protest staged by retirees
under the umbrella of Concerned Benue Pensioners in Makurdi, the state capital.
The protesting pensioners
took to the streets of Makurdi carrying placards with various inscriptions
demanding for the immediate payment of their pension arrears.
It was during the protest
that two of them allegedly slumped and became unconscious.
All efforts to revive the
affected retirees proved unsuccessful. They were taken to an undisclosed
hospital for medical attention.
Some of the inscriptions on
the protesters’ placards read: ‘’Gov Ortom fulfill your campaign promises’’,
‘’Do not starve us to death,’’ ‘’Pay us our pension’’, ‘’We are more than
30,000 pensioners and we are dying like chickens everyday’’, “We are unable to
buy our drugs’’, “Our children have stopped going to schools” and so on.
The protesters barricaded
the popular CBN- Government House Roundabout causing gridlock for several hours
while all efforts by security operatives to calm them down and allow free
passage of vehicles failed until they finally decided to move themselves to the
main Government House.
The protesters were received
at the Government House by the Acting Secretary to the Benue State Government,
Dr. Bem Meladu, commissioners of finance, education and the Head of Service.
Presenting their protest
letter to the SSG for onward delivery to the governor who was said to be out of
the state, the Chairman of the Concerned Benue Pensioners, Mr. Peter Ikyado,
said the protest would not end if the state government failed to attend to
their plight.
He added that his members
were tired of “continued failed promises” by the state government on the
payment of their pension arrears.
The acting SSG, Bem Meladu,
appealed to the protesting pensioners to be patient with government as all
measures were already in place to commence the payment of pensioners in the
state.

Can you imagine what a sad country
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