close
Sunday, December 26, 2021

DisCos, banks dominate poor-service complaints from Nigerians in 2021: Official

Babatunde Irukera explained that aviation and telecommunication related complaints followed the chart.

• December 26, 2021
Nigerian masses used to illustrate the story

The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) says electricity has again topped its 2021 consumer related complaints chart just like in 2020.

The commission’s head Babatunde Irukera told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Sunday that banking related complaints were second on the chart.

Mr Irukera explained that aviation and telecommunication related complaints followed the chart.

He said that the commission received and completed the processes of no fewer than 32,000 consumer related complaints in 2021, adding that 80 per cent of complaints were resolved.

“For the sectors that received the highest complaints, we have electricity, banking then aviation is now competing with telecommunications on the third place.

“The biggest problem with the airlines is not even the technical issues but their lack of transparency, responsiveness and been able to refund passengers when it becomes absolutely clear that flying at that time becomes pointless for them.

“We are continuing that battle and then we are resolving many complaints,’’ he said.

On the challenges faced by the commission, Irukera said that some businesses were yet to come to terms that the regulatory space had changed and that they had a responsibility.

“Others include consumers who sometimes are very complacent and do not want to enforce their rights or those that criticise the commission even when their rights are being enforced.

“The nature of our challenges are modifying themselves as we go.

“COVID has presented an incredible challenge. It has changed our lives, changed how we work yet it has not changed how we consume.

“People are not going out much to buy things, even food, people now order them to come to them. What that does is that it raises the level of complaints because people are not able to access.

“So, there are more complaints but infrastructure for handling the complaints are still the same.

“The new normal that we find ourselves is one of the key challenges,’’ he said.

Mr Irukera’s position mirrors complaints from Nigerians, who have long insisted that service providers across sectors had poor customer service. 

Power distribution companies, however, acknowledged shortcomings in their services, but said they were often handicapped by poor federal infrastructure and inability of customers to pay their bills on time.  

 (NAN)

More from Peoples Gazette

Ogun CP Lanre Bankole

States

Technician stabs transport union leader to death in Ogun

The suspect, who confessed to the killing of the deceased upon interrogation, claimed it was the devil’s handiwork.

Gridlock

Enugu

Police asked to remove checkpoints causing gridlocks in South-East

The calls come as vehicular traffic into the South-East surge as a result of people returning home for Christmas and New Year celebrations.

Rochas Okorocha/ Nwosu

States

Police invade church, arrest Rochas Okorocha’s son-in-law Uche Nwosu

Mr Nwosu was arrested on Sunday while attending his late mother’s thanksgiving service at St. Peter’s Anglican Church Eziama-Obaire Nkwerre LGA of Imo state.

Christians and Muslims

Faith

Kaduna: Muslims attend Christmas service

Last year, the number of Muslims that attended the church services outnumbered the number of Christians.

Bandit

States

Bandits demand N20 million ransom for kidnapped Ekiti chief; two more abducted

Bandits have been on rampage around Gbonyin Local Government Area of Ekiti State, kidnapping citizens.

Engulfed Next Cash & Carry

Abuja

PHOTOS: Massive looting as Abuja Next Cash & Carry supermarket goes up in flames

It is not immediately clear why police officers, Civil Defence operatives and other emergency responders at the scene kept looking while the looters steal unconscionably.