Hindustan Times (Patiala)

5 months after demonetisa­tion, state pensioners still ‘cashless’

- Sukhdeep Kaur sukhdeep.kaur@hindustant­imes.com

The genuine people should get the benefit of pension, notwithsta­nding their political affiliatio­n… the previous SADBJP government had deprived many beneficiar­ies of their due on account of their political ideology. CAPTAIN AMARINDER SINGH, chief minister

Caught between tall poll promises and empty coffers, the Captain Amarinder Singh government is finding that every department in Punjab has a “backlog” story. The Congress which had promised a three-fold hike in pensions — from to ₹500 to ₹1,500 — in its poll manifesto, will have to first mop up funds to clear the ₹475 crore backlog of pensions of last five months.

The state’s 19 lakh pensioners — elderly, widows, destitute children and differentl­y abled — have not been paid even the paltry amount of ₹500 a month since November when Prime Minister Narendra Modi demonetise­d old ₹500 and ₹1,000 notes. Chairing a meeting of the social security department on Monday, the CM asked the officials to clear all arrears till March 31.

To address the grouse of Congress leaders and workers that the previous Parkash Singh Badal government allowed its halqa in-charges and sarpanches to siphon off funds through “bogus” beneficiar­ies, the government also ordered a new verificati­on of those withdrawin­g pensions in Punjab and tweak the eligibilit­y criteria from April 1, 2017.

The CM told officials that “genuine” poor should get the benefit of pension, notwithsta­nding their political affiliatio­n, while pointing out that the Akali government had “deprived” many beneficiar­ies of their due on account of their political ideology.

The Akali government too had carried out two verificati­on drives — one each in its two back-to-back tenures — to root out “bogus” pensioners and deleted many each time. The social welfare department courted controvers­y over eliminatin­g some deserving ones. The number of pensioners also kept growing — from 13 lakh in 2009 to 15 lakh in 2014 to 19 lakh now.

While the previous government had reverted to the politicall­y-motivated system of empowering panchayats to distribute pensions, the Congress government has decided to pay pensioners through banks from November this year in order to streamline the process and ensure timely and smooth payments.

Sources in the social security department said a detailed verificati­on will be launched in villages and towns where Akali halqa in-charges and sarpanches were deciding beneficiar­ies and Congress leaders and workers have complained of “bias” and “fake” pensioners.

Under the existing rules, a prospectiv­e beneficiar­y applies to the sub-divisional magistrate, who directs release of provisiona­l pension within three days, with verificati­on to be done later. This sometimes results in diversion of the pension amount into the wrong hands, which the department later finds difficult to retract, it was pointed out at the meeting.

The meeting was attended by finance minister Manpreet Badal, chief secretary Karan Avtar Singh and CM’s chief principal secretary Suresh Kumar besides the social security director. Minister Razia Sultana could not attend the meeting owing to her sister’s health.

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