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A coalition of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) have protested Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC) move to remove residents of South-East from pre-paid meters and return them to estimated billing system.

The coalition, which is made up of CSO groups such as; Vibrant Youths Foundation, Heroine Women Foundation, Parent-Child Intervention Centre and Daniel Ukwu Leadership Foundation, marched peaceful through Okpara Avenue, Ridge and Enugu-Abakaliki Roads on Friday.

The coalition in its numbers stopped over at Radio Nigeria Station in Enugu and later made their way to EEDC Corporate Office, Enugu to press home their displeasure for the company’s anti-customers’ policy that took effect from Jan. 1, 2020.

Among inscription in their banners included; “EEDC, The People Need Clarification’’; “EEDC – Why Estimated Bill Again’’; “Tell us What to Tell Our people’’ and others.

The leader of the coalition, Mrs Onyinye Mamah, called on EEDC to toll the line of best business practice instead of using jungle and crude business method to deal with its customers.

“Best business practice says that you directly replace a customer’s existing and functional pre-paid meter with a new one if you want to migrate to a new and better platform as EEDC claims.

“Why should consumers relinquish a functional pre-paid meter, he or she bought; and then go ahead to buy a new pre-paid meter at all in the first place notwithstanding its cost,’’ Mamah said.

She called on the company to stop forthwith its ongoing move to force its customers in South-East to estimated billing system and asking its own technicians to by-pass pre-paid meters.

`The leader called on the Federal Government, Nigerian Senate and National Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) to call EEDC to order, adding; “They should revert to acceptable business practice’’.

Meanwhile, EEDC commenced temporary putting vast majority of its customers in standalone pre-paid meter, who cannot stay without electricity supply, on estimation billing as palliative before installing the smart pre-paid meters.

It was observed that the notice to revert to estimation and a wait until February before the smart pre-paid meter would be ready had been pasted in its district offices.

Reacting, the Head of Communications, EEDC, Mr Emeka Ezeh, said the company could no longer provide technological support for the standalone pre-paid meters; so customers on it should migrate to Meter Asset Provider (MAP) smart pre-paid meters.

Ezeh said that the company in collaboration with MAP meter providers had spread installment payment for smart pre-paid meters for 24 months for its standalone pre-paid meter customers.

According to him, there is no initial down payment needed for the smart pre-paid meter.

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