Gov. Uzodinma Explains Reasons For Ex-Governor’s Pension Ban

Governor Uzodinma: The Chief Executive Thief Of Imo State
Governor Hope Uzodinma
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Governor Hope Uzodinma of Imo State has given an insight into why his government sponsored the bill for the repeal of governors and Speakers’ Pensions and Privileges Law of 2007.

Uzodinma explained that the bill was illegal and gave a few privileged people the power to feed fat on the commonwealth of the state citing that the law was supposed to be for public servants who have put in ten or more years in the state’s public service.

He also explained that most of the former Governors, speakers, and other cabinet members have not spent up to a minimum of ten years in office and as such, cannot be entitled to bogus pension checks while a lot of retired public service workers still have pending pension payments running for many months at a go.

The new changes would affect people like Senator Rochas Okorocha, Ikedi Ohakim and others

Read Also: Imo Assembly Passes Law Stopping Ex-Governors Pensions

The Governor made the disclosure at the State’s Government House in Owerri, the State capital, yesterday.

In his words:

“As a young state grappling with enormous challenges, it dawned on me that the Imo state Governors and Speakers Pensions and Privileges Law No 5 of 2007 was a bad omen. At the age our governors and speakers are leaving office it will not be out of place to assume that many of them will be alive and kicking in the next 15 years or more. This will mean that by then the state will have more than 20 governors and Speakers qualified for Pensions and Privileges.

“I was alarmed that the financial implications for the state will not only be scandalous but indefensible. My simple calculation told me that there could come a time when the state could be spending more than one third of its resources to maintain former governors and speakers.

“The same governors and speakers also received severance allowances, amounting to several millions of naira, when they disengage from office. How then can the same category of former public office holders turn around to receive pensions?”

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

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