Babatunde Fashola, SAN |
The Federal Government has called on international customers who receive
electricity from Nigeria to either pay their bills or be disconnected.
DAILY POST reports that Nigeria sells power to the Republics of Togo,
Niger and Benin, and classifies the West African countries as
international customers.
The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who
confirmed this to newsmen in Abuja on Tuesday noted that the
international customers, who pay for the power they receive from Nigeria
in dollars, owed the country.
He however revealed that President Muhammadu Buhari was working hard
to ensure that the electricity debts by the country’s neighbours were
cleared.
Fashola stated that he had also directed the Nigerian Bulk
Electricity Trading Company (NBET) to go ahead and collect its money
from the international customers.
He noted that the government had issued letters to the countries
involved, adding that Nigeria would disconnect those who fail to comply
as endorsed by Buhari.
The minister said, “We issued disconnection notices and that is why
I’m asking the NBET to go and collect your money because we have duties,
obligations and international agreements with them as brother and
sister nations. But that does not mean they will not pay us if they are
defaulting. So, we have issued letters to them to pay their bills, and
from time to time, they pay.
“There was a time one head of state came to visit President Buhari
and little did I know that the real reason he came was to come and tell
him that the (power) sector had issued a notice of disconnection to his
country. And you may be interested to know that President Buhari simply
told him to go and pay, otherwise we will disconnect you because we are
also paying at home.”
Fashola also stated that he recently received the minister of power
from Niger and both of them discussed issues bordering on the payment of
electricity bills to Nigeria.
He said, “International customers, yes we have delays in payment and I
think that’s a fair thing to say. Our international customers are
government agencies and governments of Niger, Togo and the Republic of
Benin. So, it takes some time and even on our own side, we know what it
takes to get approvals, to process things and so on.
“You may be aware that the minister of power for Niger Republic was here
to see me on Thursday or Friday, and these were some of the issues we
had to discuss. And we also discussed the need for them to transfer the
rights under their old agreement, which they made with the PHCN to NBET.
So from time to time, we get the monies from international customers
and we pay the power generation companies.”
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