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  • Embargoed to 0001 Wednesday June 28 File photo dated 27/01/15 of plastic models of a man and woman standing on a pile of coins and bank notes. The retirement income gender gap has grown by £1,000 over the last year, a survey has found.
    rti31851315.jpg
  • Embargoed to 0001 Wednesday June 21 File photo dated 05/12/08 of the hands of an elderly woman. Retired households handed over £7,400 typically in tax last year - the equivalent of nearly a third (30\%) of their annual income, according to analysis.
    RTI31762990.jpg
  • Embargoed to 0001 Friday June 2 File photo dated 02/04/16 of two pensioners walking in West Sussex. More than half of people retiring this year will be doing so earlier than expected, a survey shows.
    31526859.jpg
  • File photo dated 05/12/08 of the hands of an elderly woman. Retired households handed over £7,400 typically in tax last year - the equivalent of nearly a third (30\%) of their annual income, according to analysis.
    RTI31768859.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. German: Etwa 150 Menschen demonstrieren im Berliner Regierungsviertel gegen die Entwicklung des Betriebsrentenstärkungsgesetzes. Die Organisatoren fordern ein Stopp der Umwandlung einer selbstfinanzierten, privaten Direktversicherung zu einer betrieblichen Altersvorsorge. Zwei Särge mit der Aufschrift 'Bestandsschutz' und 'Vertrauensschutz' werden vor dem Reichstagsgebäude aufgestellt. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_004.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. German: Etwa 150 Menschen demonstrieren im Berliner Regierungsviertel gegen die Entwicklung des Betriebsrentenstärkungsgesetzes. Die Organisatoren fordern ein Stopp der Umwandlung einer selbstfinanzierten, privaten Direktversicherung zu einer betrieblichen Altersvorsorge. Zwei Särge mit der Aufschrift 'Bestandsschutz' und 'Vertrauensschutz' werden vor dem Reichstagsgebäude aufgestellt. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_011.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_008.jpg
  • April 27, 2017 - Berlin, Berlin, Germany - About 150 people rally in the Berlin government district against the development of the employment retirement legislation. The Protesters call for a stop of the conversion of a self-funded, private direct insurance to a company pension. Two coffins with the inscription 'stock protection' and 'trust protection' are placed in front of the German Bundestag. German: Etwa 150 Menschen demonstrieren im Berliner Regierungsviertel gegen die Entwicklung des Betriebsrentenstärkungsgesetzes. Die Organisatoren fordern ein Stopp der Umwandlung einer selbstfinanzierten, privaten Direktversicherung zu einer betrieblichen Altersvorsorge. Zwei Särge mit der Aufschrift 'Bestandsschutz' und 'Vertrauensschutz' werden vor dem Reichstagsgebäude aufgestellt. (Credit Image: © Jan Scheunert via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170427_zap_s172_001.jpg
  • Embargoed to 0001 Wednesday June 28 File photo dated 06/01/15 of money in a piggy bank. Seven in 10 young pension savers risk heading for a cash shortfall in their retirement, a report warns.
    rti31851310.jpg
  • Golden egg in nest (Credit Image: © Image Source/Richard Ejsmentewic/Image Source/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20130827_baa_i19_1539.jpg
  • Golden egg in nest (Credit Image: © Image Source/Richard Ejsmentewic/Image Source/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20130827_baa_i19_546.jpg
  • Joe Perez, 72, a retired sea captain, originally from Spain, is being sheltered by Night Shelters’ extended facilities in Somerset West, during the government-mandated lockdown in South Africa. <br />
When the lockdown started on March 27, everyone was told to stay at home. The police asked Perez and a few other people he was staying with on the streets with to get ready for a bus ride to a central mass shelter here in Cape Town. But the buss never came, so the retiree was taken care of by Night Shelter here in Somerset West, he explains, today, Tuesday, April 21, 2020. <br />
The retiree has been homeless for nine months, since he arrived in South Africa and was robbed upon arrival. His passport, money and credit cards were stolen. That’s why he ended up on the streets (or sand dunes) of South Africa, he explains. “That’s when I was robbed the first time,” he said. “And they kept robbing me. I’m old and I’m a soft target.” <br />
Perez, who lives in Namibia, says he’s been waiting for his new passport to arrive by boat from Spain. It’s now at the embassy, and he hopes to retrieve it and a flight home to Namibia, where he resides, as soon as lockdown is over. While the heart patient very much appreciates all that the shelter staff has done for him, Perez never wants to come back to South Africa. “South Africa will never see me again because of the crime, the skollies, and the drugs,” he says. But Perez says he’s made two life-long friends on the streets whom he wants to bring home with him. PHOTO: EVA-LOTTA JANSSON
    LockdownHomelessCOS_1011.jpg
  • Joe Perez, 72, a retired sea captain, originally from Spain, is being sheltered by Night Shelters’ extended facilities in Somerset West, during the government-mandated lockdown in South Africa. <br />
When the lockdown started on March 27, everyone was told to stay at home. The police asked Perez and a few other people he was staying with on the streets with to get ready for a bus ride to a central mass shelter here in Cape Town. But the buss never came, so the retiree was taken care of by Night Shelter here in Somerset West, he explains, today, Tuesday, April 21, 2020. <br />
The retiree has been homeless for nine months, since he arrived in South Africa and was robbed upon arrival. His passport, money and credit cards were stolen. That’s why he ended up on the streets (or sand dunes) of South Africa, he explains. “That’s when I was robbed the first time,” he said. “And they kept robbing me. I’m old and I’m a soft target.” <br />
Perez, who lives in Namibia, says he’s been waiting for his new passport to arrive by boat from Spain. It’s now at the embassy, and he hopes to retrieve it and a flight home to Namibia, where he resides, as soon as lockdown is over. While the heart patient very much appreciates all that the shelter staff has done for him, Perez never wants to come back to South Africa. “South Africa will never see me again because of the crime, the skollies, and the drugs,” he says. But Perez says he’s made two life-long friends on the streets whom he wants to bring home with him. PHOTO: EVA-LOTTA JANSSON
    LockdownHomelessCOS_0989.jpg
  • Joe Perez, 72, a retired sea captain, originally from Spain, is being sheltered by Night Shelters’ extended facilities in Somerset West, during the government-mandated lockdown in South Africa. <br />
When the lockdown started on March 27, everyone was told to stay at home. The police asked Perez and a few other people he was staying with on the streets with to get ready for a bus ride to a central mass shelter here in Cape Town. But the buss never came, so the retiree was taken care of by Night Shelter here in Somerset West, he explains, today, Tuesday, April 21, 2020. <br />
The retiree has been homeless for nine months, since he arrived in South Africa and was robbed upon arrival. His passport, money and credit cards were stolen. That’s why he ended up on the streets (or sand dunes) of South Africa, he explains. “That’s when I was robbed the first time,” he said. “And they kept robbing me. I’m old and I’m a soft target.” <br />
Perez, who lives in Namibia, says he’s been waiting for his new passport to arrive by boat from Spain. It’s now at the embassy, and he hopes to retrieve it and a flight home to Namibia, where he resides, as soon as lockdown is over. While the heart patient very much appreciates all that the shelter staff has done for him, Perez never wants to come back to South Africa. “South Africa will never see me again because of the crime, the skollies, and the drugs,” he says. But Perez says he’s made two life-long friends on the streets whom he wants to bring home with him. PHOTO: EVA-LOTTA JANSSON
    LockdownHomelessCOS_0997.jpg
  • Joe Perez, 72, a retired sea captain, originally from Spain, is being sheltered by Night Shelters’ extended facilities in Somerset West, during the government-mandated lockdown in South Africa. <br />
When the lockdown started on March 27, everyone was told to stay at home. The police asked Perez and a few other people he was staying with on the streets with to get ready for a bus ride to a central mass shelter here in Cape Town. But the buss never came, so the retiree was taken care of by Night Shelter here in Somerset West, he explains, today, Tuesday, April 21, 2020. <br />
The retiree has been homeless for nine months, since he arrived in South Africa and was robbed upon arrival. His passport, money and credit cards were stolen. That’s why he ended up on the streets (or sand dunes) of South Africa, he explains. “That’s when I was robbed the first time,” he said. “And they kept robbing me. I’m old and I’m a soft target.” <br />
Perez, who lives in Namibia, says he’s been waiting for his new passport to arrive by boat from Spain. It’s now at the embassy, and he hopes to retrieve it and a flight home to Namibia, where he resides, as soon as lockdown is over. While the heart patient very much appreciates all that the shelter staff has done for him, Perez never wants to come back to South Africa. “South Africa will never see me again because of the crime, the skollies, and the drugs,” he says. But Perez says he’s made two life-long friends on the streets whom he wants to bring home with him. PHOTO: EVA-LOTTA JANSSON
    LockdownHomelessCOS_1002.jpg