Discos, signs & wonders, and citizens furry! - Ik Muo, PhD. OOU, Ago-Iwoye. muoigbo@yahoo.com; muo.ik@oouagoiwoye,edu.ng 0803026625
Discos,
signs & wonders, and citizens furry!
We are all made in the
image and likeness of God ( Gensis,1:26-27) and as such, we all have some God-like
elements in us. Thus while God is omnipresent, (present everywhere) I have
taken a part of Him by being tri-present (present in three places). Check the Nigeria Bureau of
Statistics residential database and you will surely see me as resident in Lagos(Okota),
Ijebu-Ode( Molipa) and Igboukwu( Ezeamaluchi Avenue). And to prove this my tri-presence beyond all
reasonable doubts, I start my intervention today with three stories from these
three domains.
1) Ihuowele, Igboukwu
bulk-metering and disconnection as an instrument of blackmail.
In January 2019, a meter serving the Ihuowele
village in Igboukwu, a rural community in which 90% of the houses are owned by people
in the local diaspora( absentee landlords) , received a bill of N10m+! Even Dangote cement Company would be shocked
by this kind of bill! The people protested and the EEDC officials, specifically
the Network Manager( at Ekwulobia) and Feeder Manager for Nneni Axis(named Chukwu-Chukwu)
admitted that the meter was faulty and promised to effect the necessary
repairs. However since then, they have been playing Ping-Pong with the matter.
It is either the officers were busy or their car spoilt on the road or it was too
late to come to the town or it rained or any other reason that suited them.
Just before Easter, they presented another humongous bill( based on a faulty
meter) together with a demand notice and
disconnected the light to the whole community and we had no light throughout the Easter season.
At the background to this was the demand for a ‘mobilization fee’ of N20,000,
which the committee member could not afford,
as he was a mere messenger for the community. It was pure blackmail with
disconnection and threat of disconnection as the key instruments. We decided to
write a protest letter and as at 10/6/19, more than two months later, we have
not had light. And you can be sure that any day they reconnect the light, they
will come with bills for the period they were deliberately inactive.
2) Ijebuode: billing
magic and miracle.
When I moved into the quiet neighbourhood
almost 10 years ago, the whole block of 4-flats received a single bill, given
the level of power supply and the domestic nature of the abode, the monthly bill
has been around N1500-N2500. About three months ago, the IBEDC decided to issue
four bills for the four flats and based on the estimated billing model. That
was despite the fact that there was( and is) an operational meter in the
building. They just discountenanced the meter because it paid them to do so.
The first bill under the new arrangement
was 300% higher because each flat received what the whole compound used
to receive. The following month, it was 100% higher, with each flat paying
almost a double of what the whole building used to receive. The alarmed landlord protested
to the IBEDC in person and with a letter. In May (and after the protest), we received a
bill of N12000 for a building that three months ago, received an average of
1500-N2000! What happened? That is magic
and miracle combined!
3) Okota-Samuel
Ekunola: the more you look…
At Samuel-Ekunola
street, Okata, we have been having electricity related challenges( as usual with
almost all parts of the country) but in April-May, it got so bad. We collected
the telephone numbers of the marketing officials and started bombarding them
with calls, messages and even emails. Within a week, we received the following
explanations or justifications from the Okota Business office of IKEDC
Act1: ‘Dear customer,
the current supply interruption is as a result of a fault on Amuwo industrial
11kv feeder supplying your vicinity. Our technicians are currently working to
resolve this. Please be assured that supply will be restored as soon as the
maintenance is completed. Thanks for allowing us serve you’. Good
Act 2(a few days later)
‘Dear customer, the
supply interruption in your vicinity is as a result of low power allocation
from TCN. The Transmission company of Nigeria(TCN) is currently working to
ensure that power supply is restored to your vicinity. Thank you for you
patience’ So, what do we believe? In the first one, they accepted
responsibility while in the second one they outsourced the responsibility and
both statements with a week!
It is only in Nigeria
and its reformed power sector that a customer would buy the wire, poles and
meter, join others to buy and maintain the transformer and another person just
comes to collect the money for power not supplied. And the government which has
‘privatized’ the sector keeps on pampering
and making excuses for the operators who went into the business with
their eyes wide open. It is only in Nigeria’s reformed power sector that an
organization would freely estimate its bills, disconnect customers without the
required notice and use the army and police to enforce this roguery! What model
of business is this? Well, the people are angry and while people
like me just write( and nobody reads) others have decided to ACT!(Next week)
The issue of Disco is an advanced legal Yahoo...
ReplyDeleteToday, I will go to IEDC outlet to pay 12,930 just for one duplace...
We have applied for prepaid meters but they have refused to give us one.
Estimated bill is a daylight robbery by the government...
I am not surprised about your other matters.
I have no comment for it has become a norm in our country