City Press reports that while South African soldiers are fighting for their lives in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), some are apparently unknowingly paying premiums for insurance policies that allow unscrupulous scammers to profit from their deaths.
The worst part is said to be that the beneficiaries of the policies that will pay out if these soldiers die in action in the DRC are unknown, a family member told Rapport. Exactly how the scam took place is now part of an extensive investigation into the military and three major companies that sell insurance. It only came to light after some of the soldiers’ families, who depend on their pay, reported that less and less money was being deposited into their bank accounts. Most of the soldiers in the DRC do not earn huge salaries, but are the breadwinners for extended families. They are deployed in that country for a year at a time, during which they do not receive their monthly pay slips and also have no free access to emails or mobile connections. Some of the soldiers’ family members approached Rapport in desperation after their loved ones in the DRC had tried in vain to stop the premium deductions themselves. The soldiers are forbidden to talk to journalists. According to one family member, the soldiers only realised in early June that money for policy premiums was being deducted from their salaries when one of them obtained a copy of his pay slip. It appears that life and funeral policies were taken out in the soldiers’ names without their knowledge or consent. Military spokesperson Siphiwe Dlamini said that he was in contact with the insurance companies and that progress had already been made with the investigations.
- Read the full original of the report in the above regard by Erika Gibson at City Press (subscriber access only)
- Lees ook, Swendelaars besteel SA troepe terwyl hulle veg, by Netwerk24 (toegang slegs vir intekenare)
Get other news reports at the SA Labour News home page