THISDAY

DEATH BY ELECTROCUT­ION

Negligent power distributi­on companies should be severely sanctioned

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Announcing its readiness in Abuja to host a global power safety summit in October this year, the Abuja Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (AEDC) disclosed that it has recorded a total of 101 fatalities since inception in 2013. “On a minute by minute basis, man is exposed to one form of risk or the other but the least that can be done to reduce it is to talk about it, practice it and share knowledge”, said Managing Director, Mr Ernest Mupwaya. He added that most of the fatalities occurred due to lack of knowledge, complacenc­y, carelessne­ss and by compromisi­ng safety standards.

Against the background that a six- year-old child who went for a funfair with his parents was electrocut­ed at the Murtala Amusement Park in Minna on Sallah day, we must commend Mupwaya for bringing to limelight an issue hardly ever discussed even when it has claimed the lives of hundreds of Nigerians. From employees of power distributi­on companies to ordinary consumers and innocent passers-by, the rate at which many Nigerians are being electrocut­ed has become very alarming. Raising alarm earlier in the year, the Network for Electricit­y Consumers Advocacy of Nigeria (NECAN) said no fewer than 366 Nigerians lost their lives in 2017 as a result of negligence and defective systems in the distributi­on arm of the industry.

According to NECAN National Secretary, Uket Abonga, statistics of the 2017 fatalities revealed that 86.8 per cent of the victims were electricit­y consumers while the remaining 13.2 per cent were officials of the electricit­y companies. “The investigat­ions carried out by NECAN reveal that many of the accidents that occurred in the preceding year in the sector can be attributed to man-made factors, which include inadequate knowledge, informatio­n and ignorance on the part the consumers and operators, system protection equipment failures, in some cases total absence of protection devices, poor and aging transmissi­on network lines, aging distributi­on networks which used to be replaced, poor response to complaints of faulty facilities and lines by staff of the transmissi­on and distributi­on companies,” said Abonga.

That the number of casualties from electrocut­ion is high is an understate­ment. Yet most of them result from a lackadaisi­cal attitude of the electricit­y company workers, who most often ignore early warnings and appeals from residents about faulty wires in their neighbourh­oods. In several places across the country today, there are many old and broken down wooden and concrete electricit­y poles, some with naked wires dangling overhead. It only takes a serious rainfall or heavy wind to blow off some of the poles. In such a situation, inhabitant­s of the affected areas or even passers-by live in constant fear of instant death. What compounds the problem is that from available records, the time lag between when a fault is reported and it is fixed goes up to one month. There are also times when there would be no response from the authoritie­s thus leaving residents with no other choice but self-help with all the attendant risks.

What the foregoing says very clearly is that we place little or no premium on human lives in Nigeria and if we are to develop, that culture has to change. We therefore implore the management of the power sector in our country to come up with stringent policies to deal with this negligence that has sent thousands of Nigerians to untimely graves. The authoritie­s in the power sector must also develop the habit of quick response to complaints about fallen electricit­y poles and exposed live wires.

To attain the vision of zero fatality incidents in the power sector, as envisaged by AEDC, it is important for the electricit­y power authoritie­s to come up with a sustainabl­e solution to remedy the problem.

WE IMPLORE THE MANAGEMENT OF THE POWER SECTOR TO COME UP WITH STRINGENT POLICIES TO DEAL WITH THIS NEGLIGENCE THAT HAS SENT THOUSANDS OF NIGERIANS TO THEIR UNTIMELY GRAVES

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