Protesting policemen on Monday blocked key entrance routes leading to the Presidential Villa, Abuja, disrupting movement in and around the seat of power in a dramatic escalation of long-running grievances over retirement welfare.
The action forced an immediate reinforcement of security, with heavily armed soldiers from the Brigade of Guards deployed to fortify the Villa’s perimeter and maintain order.
The aggrieved officers, many of them retirees, are demanding their removal from the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS), which they claim has subjected them to poor remuneration, irregular pension payments, and hardship in retirement.
Monday’s protest is part of a broader, coordinated agitation that has simmered for years, with retired personnel repeatedly calling for either an exit from the CPS or the establishment of a dedicated police pension structure that reflects the peculiar risks of their service.
At the heart of the renewed protest is frustration over delays in presidential assent to a bill passed by the National Assembly seeking to exempt police personnel from the CPS.
Protest leaders say the continued wait has deepened discontent among retirees who insist they can no longer cope with what they describe as “unjust and exploitative” pension conditions.
Some of the demonstrators, who chanted solidarity songs and carried placards, warned that the protest could be sustained if their demands are not met, stressing that engagements with relevant authorities in the past have failed to yield concrete results.
The development underscores a growing welfare crisis within Nigeria’s security architecture, with potential implications for morale among serving officers, even as the Federal Government faces mounting pressure to act decisively on the contentious pension issue.
The ongoing indefinite protest, organized by the Police Retired Officers Forum of Nigeria (PROF), fstarted around July 2025, blocking access points in the nation’s capital and earlier in April 2026 over unpaid pensions despite security pushback.
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