Turkmen president Gurbanguly Berdymuhammedov has
reinstated the pensions which were abolished by his predecessor and
introduced a minimum payment. NBCentralAsia observers say he should have
gone further and compensated people for pensions that went unpaid in the
past.
The new welfare code which came into force on July 1 guarantees state
pensions for all retired Turkmen citizens – which means over 57 for
women and over 62 for men.
In January 2006, the late president Sapurmat Niazov stripped some
100,000 people of their pension rights, on the grounds that the national
pension fund was short of cash. Those people will now have their rights
restored.
The legislation introduces Turkmenistan’s first basic monthly pension of
300,000 manats, around 58 US dollars at the official exchange rate, for
people those who have no verified work record, and a minimum pension of
500,000 manats, or 96 dollars.
Until now there has been no minimum pension, and the figure set for it
is ten time the monthly average that has been paid up until now.
Pensions will also be paid to those who used to work in Soviet
collective farms, as well as to the disabled, who were deprived of
social security in 2002.
NBCentralAsia observers say that even though the government’s move has
been welcomed by the public, many people had been expecting to get some
compensation for the period when their pensions were annulled, given the
effect this had on their lives.
According to Berdymuhammedov’s decree, the government is assigning
pensions from July 1 when the social security code was officially
published. Anything people feel they might be owed from before that date
will not be recompensed.
“This shows that the current reforms are half-hearted and suggests that
they will not be sustained,” said Tajigul Begmedova, head of the Turkmen
Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights, an émigré group based in Bulgaria.
Vyacheslav Mamedov, leader of the Civil Democratic Union of
Turkmenistan, another émigré group, says that the authorities still have
a chance to gain a reputation for social responsibility by compensating
people whose pensions were reduced or abolished in the past.
“The government must compensate for what it failed to pay pensioners,”
said Mamedov. “Turkmenbashi’s [Niazov’s] ‘pension reform’ is a poor
legacy for Berdymuhammedov, and he needs to solve the problem for the
sake of the new government’s image,” said Mamedov.
However, the expert believes the government may now be using some of the
oil and gas revenue to fund the pension reinstatement and increase.
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