NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

‘There are massive violations of consumer rights’

- Follow Fidelity on Twitter @FidelityMh­langa

THE Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) recently created a new baby, the Consumer Protection Committee (CPC). NewsDay (ND) business reporter Fidelity Mhlanga spoke to CPC chairperso­n Sam Watasa (SW) after a recent meeting in Harare. Below are the excerpts:

ND: Tell us about yourself and the work you do.

SW: my name is Sam Watasa, a ugandan national. I am the executive director of uganda Consumers’ Protection associatio­n. I am a commission­er at East african Community Competitio­n authority and am here as chairperso­n of the Comesa Consumer Protection Committee. Broadly, my work focuses on consumer protection, an area I have spent over 20 years of my career life in.

ND: You are the chairperso­n of the new Comesa baby, the Consumer Protection Commission. What are its objectives?

SW: I will provide what are the core deliverabl­es because the objective is largely to achieve a harmonised consumer protection environmen­t across Comesa member States. among the many deliverabl­es expected from the committee are: The establishm­ent of a minimum level of standards for consumer rights to assist and give guidance to member States; the review of consumer protection laws at national level to ensure harmonisat­ion with the provisions under Part 5 of the Comesa competitio­n regulation­s; the setting up of working groups to identify and discuss emerging trends in consumer protection in the common market, such as financial technologi­es; obtaining consensus among member States to enhance efforts towards the establishm­ent of a regional laboratory for testing of products consumed in the common market, among others.

ND: In your presentati­ons at the event in Harare you mentioned that we have extremely low levels of consumer awareness in Africa. What can be done to address this problem?

SW:

addressing low levels of consumer awareness will take concerted efforts of government­s through responsibl­e agencies, civil society organisati­ons, internatio­nal agencies and knowledgea­ble individual­s. It requires sustainabl­e efforts because consumer protection issues are as dynamic as the economic environmen­t, the market and economic operators. The entry point lies squarely in your ambit as the media; to develop knowledge-seeking behaviour on consumer protection, pass on such knowledge to the public and publish feedback.

ND: What is the work of the commission in promoting consumer law in Africa?

SW: The work of the Comesa Competitio­n Commission is to regulate market conduct of entities to ensure that their operations guarantee increasing­ly better consumer welfare in terms of the right to choice, quality and safe goods and services.

ND: South Africa is not a member of Comesa. What can be done to address problems affecting member States who trade with SA?

SW: The Competitio­n act operates irrespecti­ve of the country of origin of goods, territoria­l jurisdicti­on as long as trading or business operations are traceable in the common market and are identifiab­le to have a cross-border effect. accordingl­y, whether the origin of goods and services is in South africa despite that it is not a member of Comesa, as long as harm to consumers is establishe­d in two or more Comesa member States, the act is evocable.

ND: Member States have competitio­n commission­s. So at what stage can a competitio­n issue be escalated to be addressed at Comesa level?

SW::

non-compliance with competitio­n regulation­s becomes an issue of concern where such infringeme­nt has an effect in more than one member State. Issues prevalent in one State fall under the jurisdicti­on of national competitio­n authoritie­s.

ND: The African consumer commission­s are mostly domiciled in towns and yet a majority of consumers are domiciled in the rural areas.

What can be done to address this disparity?

SW: The choice of location of consumer protection and competitio­n commission­s in towns can be explained by the need to co-ordinate and closely work with complement­ary agencies to achieve reasonable impact for consumer protection. Informed consumers cannot be constraine­d to report abuse on account of location of the organisati­on or agency. However, consumer protection agencies and associatio­ns can design institutio­nal structures that deliver on effective functional impact despite such location.

ND: Which sectors of the economy do we usually find companies which violate competitio­n laws.

SW:

Violation of consumer rights and abuse of market position by entities is across all product sectors. It is, however, most felt in fast-moving consumer goods and sectors where such conduct has attractive returns, but more especially, where competitio­n regulation is weak or non-existent. Where there are no sanctions, misconduct becomes profitable.

 ?? ?? Fidelity Mhlanga
Fidelity Mhlanga
 ?? ?? CPC chairperso­n Sam Watasa
CPC chairperso­n Sam Watasa

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