Retired Naval officers threaten protest over unpaid allowances

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To protest the non-payment of their terminal leave and packing allowances, some retired Nigerian Navy personnel have promised to storm the service’s headquarters.

The retired Naval soldiers, who are all from the 1984 generation and left the service in 2020, complained bitterly about having to wait an eternity for their entitlements while those who left the service later had already received them.

The retirees claimed they had contacted Vice Admiral Awwal Gambo, the Chief of Naval Staff, three times and visited the national headquarters to draw his attention to their issue, but all efforts had been in vain.

In a letter dated March 16 by the Coalition Of Concerned Veterans and obtained by our correspondent on Tuesday, the aggrieved retirees urged the CNS to pay up to avoid a ‘historic embarrassment of protest’ at the Naval headquarters.

It partly read, “The leadership of the Coalition Of Concerned Veterans humbly bring to the notice of the Chief Of Naval Staff, two previous letters were written on the above subject and regret to observe that nothing practicable has been done to address the issues, despite our visit to the Naval Headquarters to meet with the Director Veterans affairs (NN) and the Chief Of Account and budgeting in June 2022.

“We are aware of the great achievements of the Chief Of Naval staff in his quest to reposition the service and better the lots of personnel under his command but also regret that some top officials at the headquarters want to give his administration a bad name in the twilight of his stewardship, despite all efforts as well as unofficially Intervention by top officials of the MOD to address the issue.

“It is not our intension to cause the Chief Of Naval Staff a “historic embarrassment” of protest to the Naval Headquarters, as we did to the Ministry of Defence in September 2022. We hope reasons will prevail to discourage our assemblage at the Headquarters gate of the Naval complex in a few weeks if our request/demands are not shortest possible time.”

When contacted on Tuesday, the Navy Spokesperson, Commodore Adedotun Ayo-Vaughan, disclosed the willingness of the service to pay the retirees, adding that some technicalities to ascertain if they are qualified for the allowances must first be resolved.

He said, “Concerning your inquiry, there is a need to understand the background of the issue. Sometimes in 2019, there was the manual of financial administration for Armed Forces of Nigeria was released and eventually took effect in 2020. These categories of personnel left the service before the document which had in it some of the allowances they said we owed them.

“They retired from the service before there were appropriate resources to back up some of the allowances indicated in this document which was signed by the president. Also, there are technicalities as to whether or not they are beneficiaries of the allowance contained in the document which came to be at about the time they left the service and which was eventually implemented when they had left the service. That is the issue. It is not that we are not desirous of paying them.”