Dr Isaac Mulagoli the chief executive Pyrethrum Board of Kenya. Photo/FILE
By FRANCIS MUREITHI fmureithi@ke.nationmedia.com
The pensions regulator has called for an urgent
meeting to save the Pyrethrum Board of Kenya Staff Superannuation Scheme
from total collapse.
The Retirement Benefit Authority (RBA) has also
promised to act against employers who fail to remit money deducted from
employees to retirement schemes.
“The board of RBA has called for an urgent meeting
to identify a liquidator who will take over the assets of the PBK as it
has failed to show commitment to remit money to the pension scheme,” a
senior RBA official told the Sunday Nation.
The meeting will be held on May 15
The official, who declined to be named as he is
not authorised to speak to the press on behalf of RBA, accused PBK of
not being “serious” in securing money for the retirees.
PBK pensioners Mr Thomas Nyambega and Mr Harun
Tinga, who attended a meeting with RBA officials. welcomed the new move
but termed it “too little too late”.
“This is what RBA should have done long time ago
instead of waiting for pensioners to suffer as they watch, yet they are
the custodian of the rules and regulations which govern the management
of pension schemes in the country,” said Mr Tinga.
During the meeting, it emerged that PBK had submitted a remedial plan, but it was rejected by RBA.
Plan rejected
“The remedial plan submitted by PBK does not add
value to the pensioners as per our agreement, and we have therefore
rejected it in totality,” said RBA officials.
The official said that PBK, in a memorandum
written by the board’s managing director Isaac Mulagoli, had requested
RBA to give it up to 2016 to sort out its financial mess.
However, a source told the Sunday Nation
that RBA has written to the board indicating its intention to appoint a
liquidator to take over some of the assets belonging to PBK and dispose
them of to enable the pensioners to be paid their monthly dues without
any interruption.
The pensioners had threatened to stage a
demonstration outside the RBA offices in Nairobi after the authority
appeared to be ignoring the issue.
They cited a case where RBA, in its tribunal
ruling of September 26, 2011, ordered PBK to pay the pensioners their
delayed pension, but this has not been done.
“RBA has even refused to give us a copy of the
ruling so that we could seek intervention from the High Court; this is
tantamount to deliberately delaying the wheels of justice,” said Mr
Tinga.
But an official of the RBA said the days of employers who have been delaying in remitting pension deductions are numbered.
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