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Abia Ends Payment of Pensions to Former Govs

AFRIQUECAN: STARTING immediately,  pensions will no longer be paid to former governors and deputy governors in Abia state.

This comes after the sitting governor of the state, Alex Otti assented to the Abia State of Nigeria Governors and Deputy Governors Pension Repeal Law of 2024 recently passed by the State House of Assembly.

According to Otti, the money will be better used in offsetting the backlog of pensions owed Abia retired workers since 2014.

“I want to make a few things clear, one that even before we came onboard a lot of people who had followed our views understood that we were not going to continue with the practice of paying pensions and allowances to this set of former government officials. A lot of people have confronted me to remind me that very soon I will also be a former governor and I agree, ” Otti said.

Otti stressed that government is not about self-interest, adding that repealing the pensions for governors and deputy governors was the right step to take as it is all about good governance and stewardship.

“It’s all about good governance. It’s all about stewardship to our people and I strongly believe that any leader who believes that leadership is a business has lost his way. As far as I am concerned, leadership is stewardship and if you now want to take up all the resources that belong to the people you are leading, I’m not sure that is morally correct,” governor Otti stated.

“Government is not about self-interest and it’s actually self-interest that destroys government, and if you accuse me of belonging to a class, I would readily admit, but add that I have happily committed class suicide because I would have benefitted if this law had continued. But we all know that it’s not the best for the country, for this state, for the workers who were hitherto owed for months, and for pensioners who we are still struggling to defray several months and years of arrears from 2014. It’s more appropriate for us to use the funds that would have been used to pay former elected political office holders.”

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