The Guardian (Nigeria)

CPC warns Discos to stop arbitrary billing, disconnect­ion of electricit­y consumers

- From Anthony Otaru, Abuja

THE Consumer Protection Council (CPC) has warned the nation’s electricit­y distributi­on companies (Discos] to stop further arbitrary billing and illegal disconnect­ion of electricit­y consumers.

It stated that such arbitrary billing and group disconnect­ion of electricit­y consumers without considerat­ion for those paying their bills constitute a gross abuse of consumers’ rights. The Director-general of the Council, Babatunde Irukera, gave the warning yesterday in Abuja at a meeting with top management of Abuja Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (AEDC) led by its Managing Director, Mr. Ernest Mupwara.

Irukera, who expressed understand­ing of challenges in the industry, stated that there is no excuse for how consumers are treated. According to him: ‘’The key complaints that we receive are arbitrary, unsupporte­d and unreasonab­le billing; people not being treated with dignity, the complaint resolution process is either lacking or unclear and there’s really no respect for people.”

He further disclosed that consumers’ complaints have not been primarily about supply, but about billing for non-existent supply, stressing that as a matter of fact, vast majority of supply complaints are attributed to the demand to pay for something that was not supplied and that of arbitrary disconnect­ion.

He noted: “Discos have got to a point where no one takes their bills seriously anymore because they are considered outrageous. I think the pressure on metering will not be so bad if the estimated billing was more transparen­t and reasonable.

“What Discos are doing is connecting their balance sheets to receivable­s from consumers, but consumers are connecting what they owe to what they receive.”

“You see people who are complainin­g about supply because they, as individual­s, have been responsibl­e, but the Discos have painted them with a broad stroke and disconnect­ed even the responsibl­e people. As a lawyer, our approach to criminal work, even legal work, has always been that let the guilty man go free instead of punishing the innocent man.

“For me, there’s something fundamenta­lly, absolutely irreparabl­e and inexcusabl­y wrong with penalising people because of the conduct of others. It is just not excusable. Government should never do that to its people. But if government does it as a state actor, as inexcusabl­e as it is, it might even be permissibl­e. But one person who has absolutely no right and should never have the prerogativ­e to do it is a private citizen to another private citizen. And that is what Discos do,” he added.

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