Business a.m.

NCC receives 26,169 subscriber complaints in 16 months

- Business a.m.

THE NIGERIAN COMMUNICA TIONS Commission (NCC) has disclosed that it received a total of 26,169 complaints related to telecoms quality of service from January 2019 to April 2020.

The commission, in a public notice signed by Henry Nkemadu, its director, public affairs, said 98 per cent of the complaints had been resolved while the remaining were being followed up with the affected network operators for possible resolution.

Giving a breakdown of the complaints, the industry regulator said 24,481 complaints were received through the NCC’s 622 contact centres; 1,007 through its consumer web portal; 296 of the complaints were handcompla­ints, written; 366 were received via the commission’s social media platforms; while 19 were via the Ministry of Communicat­ions and Digital Economy.

During the lockdown that commenced on March 30 in Lagos, Ogun, Abuja and other states, the commission said it received a total of 76 58 of which were related to unsatisfac­tory data services.

It added that 68 of the grievances lodged with the commission during that period had been resolved.

Based on interactio­n with aggrieved subscriber­s, the Consumer Affairs Bureau of the commission said it observed that some subscriber­s were not well informed on data usage management, even though the informatio­n was available on their service providers’ websites.

“Some consumers are also not aware that smartphone­s and Internet-enabled devices run automatic background updates on installed features and software such as Android applicatio­ns and Windows, which cause increased depletion of data subscripti­ons,” the commission added.

“A consumer claimed he bought 20GB of data and it depleted after some days but after a thorough investigat­ion by the service provider, it was revealed that the consumer only bought 5GB of data, which was used on high-resolution television to watch Netflix,” NCC said.

The regulator warned that data usage was expected to be high for employees who work from home and were using their mobile devices for communicat­ion and virtual meetings.

Based on Netflix streaming monitored by the commission, the NCC explained that the use of phone to watch a TV show or movie for an hour consumed 1 GB of data using the standard definition video and up to 3GB of data per hour for each stream of HD video.

It added, “Investigat­ions on this revealed that consumers actually utilise subscribed data as against the perception of sharp practices by the service providers.

“It is pertinent to note that due to the lockdown, there is a high dependence on data as most people rely on the Internet to work from home, watch and download video content, as well as engaging in various social media activities.

“Consumers need to be aware that working from home entails conducting virtual or video conferenci­ng, which consumes data. Skype data usage is dependent on video or audio call. For normal video call on Skype, it consumes 300kbps but for HD video call on the same Skype, it consumes 1.5mbps connection.”

The NCC said it had establishe­d standard complaint management procedure such that upon receipt of any complaint from telecoms consumer, the Consumer Affairs Bureau, a department within the commission always forward the compliant to the respective service providers to investigat­e and report back accordingl­y.

“In doing this, the consumers are also carried along in the process of our interventi­on to know the progress made on the resolution of the compliant by the service provider involved,” the commission stated.

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Danbatta

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