Latest studies have shown that Nigeria falls among the list of
countries with the cheapest cost of communication, the Nigerian
Communications Commission has said.
The Executive Vice Chairman, NCC, Prof. Umar Danbatta, stated this
at the NCC day during the 30th Lagos International Trade Fair.
Represented by the Director, Policy, Competition and Economic
Analysis at the NCC, Ms. Josephine Amuwa, the NCC EVC said that the
commission was working very hard to ensure that consumers of
telecommunications services in Nigeria were not highly billed.
According to Danbatta, the NCC recognises that consumers of
telecommunications services in Nigeria need to get value for their
money, and be treated as very important stakeholders in the scheme of
things as far as service delivery was concerned.
“Let me recall that in the eight-point agenda of my
administration, the issue of empowerment and protection of consumers
occupies the sixth position. The vision is to protect consumers from
unfair practices through availability of information to make informed
decisions in the use of the ICT services,” he said.
He said the strategy the NCC was adopting in achieving the set
objectives was the strengthening of initiatives to educate consumers on
the use of communication services and acting swiftly whenever necessary
in the use of enforcement to protect telecom services consumers’ rights.
Speaking at the event, the Head, Media and Public Relations, NCC,
Mr. Reuben Muoka, said the consumers who doubted the fact that Nigeria
was among countries with the cheapest rate of communication could go to
other countries and experience their rates.
Muoka, who said the NCC was very concerned about the welfare of
consumers, urged consumers not to hesitate to forward their complaints
about any service provider to the NCC.
He stated that the NCC, which condemned sharp practices by service
providers, would waste no time in appropriately sanctioning defaulters.
Speaking further, Muoka said the NCC had declared 2017 as the ‘Year
of the Nigerian Telecom Consumer’, the essence of which was to reassure
consumers that the issue of protecting them from unfair practices was
not a mere talk, but a call to action.
He said the NCC had launched two codes to cater for the needs and efficiently attend to the complaints of consumers.
“The first code is the 622 toll-free complaint platform, where
people can call to make their complaints. The second is the 2442
‘do-not-disturb code’ that consumers can send prompt commands to,” he said.
He advised consumers to make use of the codes to stop unsolicited
text messages and calls, and to lodge complaints to the commission if
their service providers refused or were unable to resolve their
complaints.
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