The
Consumer Protection Council seeks foreign assistance on how to protect
consumers. I recommend that the excesses of mobile phone companies
should be the first area of focus for the Council. It’s because they
harass and cheat millions of consumers, silently.
Not
long ago, it was in the news that the Director-General of the Council,
Mrs. Dupe Atoki, had, while receiving the Ambassador of the Delegation
of the European Union to Nigeria and ECOWAS expressed optimism that the
EU would support the Council’s efforts in the development of globally
acceptable standard guidelines for businesses in Nigeria.
News
of the assistance being sought caught my attention because I had also
been on the receiving end of the sharp practices of some mobile phone
companies. At the moment, I have taken a definite action against one of
them. Apart from this, I have used the opportunity this provides to test
how the system responds, as well as follow it through, when a consumer
has a case against a mobile phone company. In the process, I find that
the current leadership at the CPC is far better, compared to the
immediate past administration. There is no point being long on the poor
performance of Atoki’s predecessor except to state that at the time I
took a complaint to the office of the CPC under that past
administration, I got engaged in an argument with a staff about what
kind of complaint a consumer could bring, and what complaint a consumer
should not bring to the attention of the Council. I left my letter of
complaint with them nevertheless, but in the end, there was neither an
acknowledgment nor was there any indication that action was taken. I
remember that at the end of that particular year, the CPC held an award
ceremony, giving prizes to Nigerians it felt had performed. For me, such
an endeavour on that occasion under that past administration amounted
to an agency abandoning its core mandate to go into what Nigerians
didn’t send it to do.
Back to the issue of cheating that mobile
phone companies here engage in. Apart from the big money they all make,
some of them have gone into taking money that doesn’t belong to them
from helpless Nigerians.
They advertise products for you to
subscribe to, and without you subscribing, they start to deduct your
money. Globacom has done it to me twice, and it still does, even though I
have taken a definite action from my end. This was how the matter went
when the mobile phone company cheated me for the first time: I was asked
to subscribe to a joke pack. I didn’t. But a notice arrived that I had
subscribed and money was deducted from my account. I was not surprised
when an employee in my office said it had been doing the same to him and
his wife. In short, he said the last amount he had on him on one
occasion was what he had used to purchase recharge card in order to make
a long emergency call, but that wasn’t possible after his account was
deducted.
When Glo deducted my account wrongfully for the first
time, and because I was keen to test how the system worked in order to
have an informed opinion, I wrote a letter to the CPC under Atoki and I
personally delivered it at the Abuja office. Excerpts from the letter,
written on August 29, 2014, read: “Dear Ma, Complaints Against Glo
Mobile Phone Company. Please, note the following: I began to receive
notice on my phone that I subscribed to packages that I never subscribed
to from the telephone company that I use, Glo. Take the following
examples:
Date: August 15, 2014. Time: 8:37am. Text Message:
5052: ‘Your subscription for Joke Pack has been successfully renewed at
100NGN for 30 days.’ I want to state that I had never subscribed to Joke
Pack and I had never received any joke on my phone before this
information came, so I didn’t know how the matter of renewal came up.
The deduction for this alleged renewal was made on my Glo account, and I
want my money back. I request that you ask for my data and investigate
this matter with a view to stopping it, because the same must have been
done to many consumers, so some have been profiting by taking what is
not theirs. On this, I want my money back. I will like to be notified of
the action your agency takes over this complaint. Thanks and regards.”
The
CPC contacted me shortly after I submitted the letter. It was because I
had included complaints about two mobile phone companies in my initial
letter and the officer who spoke to me on phone wanted me to write two
separate letters for each of the two companies, the other being MTN that
had been double-charging each SMS that I sent. In case MTN chooses to
check my data and investigate this claim, here are excerpts from the
letter written to the CPC on August 29, 2014:
“Dear Ma,
Complaints
Against MTN Mobile Phone Company for Double Charge. Please, note the
following: On most occasions in the last ten months, MTN drew money
twice for each text message that I sent. But take for example this date
that I have chosen to record: Date- July 31, 2014. Time- 1:19pm. After I
sent an SMS, I got this message: ‘Total cost of last SMS sent was
4:00.’ Two seconds later, my account was debited once more for the same
text.”
I never got a feedback from MTN, but Glo called me after
about five weeks after I submitted my letter to the CPC, and had also
personally taken the same complaint to its Abuja office, to ask if I
brought a complaint and if I had seen the money it deducted but which it
had sent back to my cell phone. Glo did refund some money but what I
noticed was that what it refunded was about three quarter of what it
deducted. It still withheld the money for the number of days for which
it had sent unsolicited jokes to my phone. The matter did not end there.
About four months later, it send a message asking me to subscribe to
Proverbs. I didn’t. That didn’t stop the company from notifying me that I
had subscribed: “Your subscription for Proverbs has been successfully
renewed at 100 NGN for 30 days.” The message came on August 15, 2014,
under 5052, and at 08:37am. I had never subscribed to its Proverbs, but I
was informed that my subscription had been renewed. The company must
have done this to millions of Nigerians, and what it reaps from it can
be imagined if it takes 100 naira per month for what is not subscribed
to from at least one million consumers. It makes big money from what it
earns legitimately, but it still proceeds to make money by cheating.
This goes on full steam when it is considered that not many Nigerians
have the time to take action, follow it through, and demand that what is
wrongly taken from them should be returned.
There’s something
about these occurrences and others that customers are made to helplessly
pass through in this country. The matter is not limited to mobile phone
companies. There are others such as the banking sector a few of which
cases I have also tried to test and follow through in order to have an
understanding of how the system works to protect consumers. Those shall
be treated some other time.
But for now, attention is on how the
CPC intends to stop the excesses of the mobile phone companies. I clap
because the Council is calling on the EU. That’s one continent where no
consumer’s cent can be taken wrongfully by any company without it having
a fight on its hands. All that the consumer needs to do is lodge a
complaint with the appropriate authority and the matter is taken care
of. I look forward to a CPC that firmly does the same on behalf of
Nigerians. As for the GSM company that continues to send Proverbs to my
phone, I don’t recharge anymore but dedicated its line solely to
receiving calls. That’s the definite action I have taken. Meanwhile,
another network that doesn’t cheat has become the beneficiary of my
patronage.
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