A pro-transparency Non-Governmental Organization-HUMAN RIGHTS WRITERS ASSOCIATION OF NIGERIA [HURIWA] has faulted the directive by the Nigerian Communications Commission [NCC] that fines of over N645 million slammed on some four defaulting telecom companies be paid into NCC's account.
In a
letter sent by the organization to the hierarchy of the NCC in reaction to the
public notice on the development, the Rights group reminded the telecom
regulator that the right beneficiaries of any financial fines imposed and
received from any defaulting telecommunications services' providers should be
remitted to the accounts of the Nigerian customers who are the victims and not
to the account of the regulatory body which suffers no breach of contract
since the binding contract is between the customers and service providers.
HURIWA
made the observations in a letter titled; "FOI request concerning
recent sanctions against telecom service providers and request for further and
better clarification particularly on the rights of consumers" and served
on the NCC'S board dated February 25th 2014 through the office of the executive
vice chairman.
Excerpts
from the letter sent to the Executive Vice Chairman of NCC by the Rights group
and endorsed by the National Coordinator Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko stated thus;
"As a pressure group made up of talented Nigerians in the creative
industry and also the media of mass communication, our members have always
followed every public policy decisions made and disseminated to the public
domain by your good offices".
"Sir,
kindly note that under section 2(1) of the FOI Act of 2011, your good office is
obliged to provide us with the necessary information that we are by this letter
seeking.
The
relevant provision of this law states thus; “(1) ... the right to any
person to access or request information, whether or not contained in any
written form, which is in the custody or possession of any public official,
agency or institution howsoever described, is hereby established.”
HURIWA
also prayed the NCC thus; " Sir, could you furnish us with the
information on the fundamental reasons for the very recent administrative
sanctions by way of fines that your good offices slammed on four major service
operators in the telecom service sector of Nigeria."
" Sir,
could you inform us the criterium for determining who benefits from the
financial fines already collected last year and the set of fines that may
accrue from the administrative action of your office against the four telecom
service providers as reported in the media. Lastly, we are making
these sets of requests in good faith because as citizens of Nigeria and good
customers of those defaulting firms, we are convinced that the principle of
restorative justice demands that every payments made by these firms for
defaulting in their terms of contracts must be paid to each and every one of
their registered customers who are the direct victims of the failure of these
firms to provide standard and transparent services", HURIWA
said.
"Sir,
please direct that the fines to be paid by the defaulting telecom service
providers be paid to the real victims who are the customers since it is not the
duty of government to benefit financially from defaulting companies while the
real customers are left to 'leak their wounds'."
Specifically,
the NCC had sanctioned three of the four major service operators in the
country-MTN Nigeria, Globalcom and Airtel-the sum of N647.5 million for breach
of key performance indicators ( KPIs) and poor quality of service for the month
of January 2014. Etisalat was however, given clean bill, saying that it met all
the set KPLs".
25/2/2014.
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