blinkx
  • Families condemn £47m MoD bonuses

  • 00:01:06
  • ITN
    • Browse

Families condemn £47m MoD bonuses

Civil servants at the Ministry of Defence shared performance bonuses totalling more than £47 million this year, it has emerged. The Conservatives said that the figure would anger troops at a time when soldiers serving in Afghanistan are complaining of equipment shortages. The Ministry of Defence said that the bonuses - going to around 50,000 staff - would average less than £1,000. But there are reports that some senior officials may be receiving as much as £8,000. The figure emerged in a written reply from defence minister Kevan Jones to shadow defence secretary Liam Fox. Mr Jones revealed that MoD staff received bonuses totalling £47,283,853 in the seven months from April to October this year. Hazel Hunt, whose son Private Richard Hunt died in August in Helmand Province, said: "They are not delivering and I think it is obscene they have got such bonuses while our troops are being short changed; not only in equipment but also in the fact that my son was barely on £17,000 a year." The lowest-paid Army privates earn £16,681 a year, with a six-month tax-free operational allowance of £2,380 if they are posted to Afghanistan. An MoD spokesman said: "These pay awards are met from within salary budget and have no impact on the operational or equipment budget.

ITN | November 12, 2009Watch more videos from ITN

Tags:. .private. .allowance. .changed. .kevan. .son











Allowance   Average   Awards   Bonuses   Changed   Civil   Complaining   Fact   Hazel   Helmand Province   Kevan   Liam   Mod   Obscene   Private   Richard Hunt   Salary   Serving   Shortages   Son   Spokesman   Totalling   Written