The Voice (Botswana)

CAN I GET A REFUND TOO?

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Good day, sir. I have a quick question, but first here’s my story:

On Sunday 24th May, 2020, I purchased a water purifier for P1,500 from someone on Facebook, and he came and installed it. That Wednesday 27th May, I woke up to find my house full of water, the filtration system was leaking. I contacted him and he came on the 7th June. He fiddled a bit with the device and said it was OK, it had just needed a little tightening. That same night, it started leaking again.

It seemed to me that the device was probably defective and I requested a replacemen­t, which he agreed to but never did. He stopped taking my calls. On 28th June, he answered and said he’d find me a replacemen­t filter. I told him I’d rather get a refund as I wasn’t interested in this gadget anymore. Once again he agreed and said he’d talk to me on the 2nd July. He hasn’t communicat­ed since. His partner also doesn’t take my calls. My question is, where do I go for help? Secondly, they advertise these things on Facebook; how do I help the next person to not go through this headache?

I think this supplier needs a lesson about the new Consumer Protection Act. It’s something that ALL suppliers need to understand. Section 15 (1) of the Act says that goods must be “of good quality, in good working order and free of defects”. Section 16 (1) says that “the producer or importer, the distributo­r and the retailer each warrant that the goods comply” with that requiremen­t. Read that last bit again. Everyone in the supply chain is now forced to promise that the goods are adequate. No longer can they play the blame game, saying it’s someone else’s responsibi­lity to fix things. Sections 16 (2) and (3) then say that if the goods fail to satisfy these requiremen­ts the consumer can return them for either a repair, replacemen­t or refund but it’s up to the suppler to decide which they offer. However, the best bit comes next. Section 16 (4) says that if the same problem occurs again within three months, the consumer can now demand either a replacemen­t or refund. There’s no second chance to repair something.

I think we should both tell this guy what the law says, don’t you? Maybe a little education on consumer rights would help him to honour his obligation­s. In fact, maybe all suppliers need to learn this?

As for your last question, how you can help other people not to experience the same disappoint­ment, let’s see how well he responds. Then maybe Facebook can do what it’s best at!

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