By SOLOMON ARINAITWE
KAMPALA
Elderly persons under their umbrella body, the
Uganda Reach the Aged Association, yesterday urged the government to
institute strong institutional measures to curb corruption in the
Pensions sector. The group also called for the decentralisation of
access to pension funds, to reduce the costs incurred by beneficiaries
in the process of chasing payments.
Mr David Obot, the chairman of the association,
told a breakfast meeting of old persons in Kampala yesterday that
corruption in the pension sector had left them without access to basic
necessities like food, accommodation and medical care.
“The pensions have been mismanaged by a few
individuals and people have to travel from very far and get nothing,
while one pensioner even died on the road. Government needs to put in
measures to curb corruption,” Mr Obot said.
Mr Obot also urged the government to equip health
centres with drugs, equip the youth with information in order to bridge
the “generation –gap” between them and the aged, and also to encourage
families not to abandon the elderly persons.
Case in point
He cited the case that this newspaper broke last week of Ms Salume Angwec, the mother of Uganda’s first gold medallist John Akii-Bua, who lives in a dilapidated structure in Corner Abako village, Ojul Parish Alebtong District.
State Minister for the Elderly and Disabled
Suleiman Madada, acknowledged the corruption that has plagued the
pensions sector, but countered that measures are being implemented to
eliminate it. “Government is aware of the challenges faced by pensioners
such as delays in accessing their pensions and high costs of transport
to reach pay points, and will continue advocating for decentralisation
of the processing and disbursement of retirement benefits,” Mr Madada
read from a speech he delivered on behalf of the Minister for Gender,
Labour and Social Development, Mr John Nasasira.
No comments:
Post a Comment