2,600 Telkom Kenya retirees to get Sh7.2bn payout

A Telkom Kenya outlet on Koinange Street in Nairobi.  PHOTO | FILE

What you need to know:

  • Tribunal finds the retrenchees were not paid in accordance with the prevailing trust deed and schemes rules.
  • It said testimony received from an international actuarist indicated that there was variance in the amounts received by the retrenchees.
  • Telkom had relied on figures calculated by actuarists Alexander Forbes Financial Services

More than 2,600 former employees of Telkom Kenya are set to be paid an additional Sh7.2 billion in terminal dues following a court ruling in their favour.

A four-member Retirement Benefits Authority tribunal (RBA) established that the 2,613 retrenched workers of the former State agency had been underpaid their pensions by the Trustees of Teleposta Pensions Scheme and Provident Fund, which they were members of.

Tribunal members concurred with lawyer Titus Koceyo for the retrenchees that they were not paid in accordance with the prevailing trust deed and schemes rules.

Therefore, the trustees were directed to pay interest on the sums payable to each retrenchee from the date of exit until payment in full “which shall not be less than the investment interest declared in the years that the benefit has remained due.”

Mr Koceyo had told the RBA tribunal comprising Kakai Cheloti (chairman), Veronicah Owenda, Job Momanyi and Muthomi Thiankolu that Telkom was the sponsor of the scheme and that the formula invoked in calculating the terminal dues was wrong.

The tribunal said testimony received from an international actuarist, Robert Oketch of NBC Holdings Proprietary (Pty) Limited of South Africa, indicated that there was variance in the amounts received by the retrenchees.

The tribunal said Mr Oketch compared the computated figures received by the thousands of retrenchees upon exit and what they were supposed to receive upon retiring before concluding they were underpaid.

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Telkom had relied on figures calculated by actuarists Alexander Forbes Financial Services (EA) when they paid the workers who they had relieved duties.

Telkom had discounted the amounts paid to its former workers.

“In our view any computation of the appellants benefits by application of a discounting (reducing) factor at age 55 is contrary to regulation 16 (1) as they reduced accrued rights and interests,” said the tribunal members in their judgement.

The tribunal ruled that the Teleposta Pensions Scheme and Provident Fund had a fiduciary obligation requiring them to act in the best interest of the beneficiaries and “pay them the right amounts owing.”

Allowing the appeal by the former retrenchees as presented by Mr Koceyo, the tribunal established that they have proved their case.

“We hereby direct the trustees of Teleposta to compute and pay to each of the retrenchees (2,613) the benefits due to them by applying the rules of the scheme on accrued rights which is — a pension equal to 1/480th of each retrenchees final pensionable salary for each completed month of pensionable service,” the tribunal determined.

The trustees will offset from any monies found due to each appellant (retrenchee) any amounts so far paid.

The trustees were directed to prepare and submit to each retrenchee an account showing the amount owing.

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Note: The results are not exact but very close to the actual.