Audio By Carbonatix
The Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) is advising the public, particularly pensioners to disregard calls by some unscrupulous persons that they could help them claim their benefit from the trust.
In a statement, the Trust, said management of SSNIT wishes to inform the public to disregard such calls as there is no “locked up pension balance to be collected”.
It explained that the trust has not engaged or commissioned any individual or body to assist pensioners to claim any benefit from SSNIT.
It cautioned the public not to engage any individual or body purporting to act on behalf of the trust in this regard.
“We encourage the public especially pensioners to report such persons to the nearest police station or SSNIT Office”
The trust further stated that the processing of pension benefits is free.
Latest Stories
-
Unpacking the Future of AI: The Promise of Embodied Intelligence
5 minutes -
The Inconvenient Truth: Institutions rarely collapse because of bad laws. They collapse when their guardians stop guarding
28 minutes -
Iran says it struck ships in Strait of Hormuz after US launches new strikes
2 hours -
Growing backlash in Japan over Trump’s use of anime characters
2 hours -
Bill Gates says Epstein wanted personal relationship, but he ‘never reciprocated’
2 hours -
Daniel Doe Djirackor
3 hours -
Evangelist Mrs Grace Baaba Fabiwa Duah
3 hours -
Missing newborn at Salaga Hospital: Police question staff as regional team launches probe
3 hours -
Sand truck mate dies, driver injured in Bokankye electrocution incident
3 hours -
Witness confirms withdrawals reflected in bank statements in Adu-Boahene trial
3 hours -
Hohoe Court jails man four years for stealing church instruments
3 hours -
Kasapreko IPO secures GH¢1.72bn, in bids from investors
4 hours -
Ghana launches landmark Women and Youth Employment programme to create over 30,000 jobs
4 hours -
Professional scouts identify talent at Dr. Grace Community League 2026
4 hours -
Flood fight requires bold demolitions and political will — Oppong Asamoah
4 hours