The
Revenue Protection Unit of the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) has
arrested a power-stealing syndicate at a small-scale mining site in the
Tarkwa-Nsuaem municipality.
A patriotic citizen, puzzled by the
illegal use of power by the miners, tipped off ECG officials, who
effected the arrest of the small-scale miners.
The miners had
since been asked to pay GH¢1.5 million, being the cost of power consumed
illegally, and after the payment, 6.5 per cent will be given to the
informant as his reward.
To rally public support to clamp down on
illegal acts by electricity consumers, the ECG instituted a reward
package, in which all informants or whistleblowers will be rewarded with
a percentage of the amount to be retrieved.
With regard to the
Tarkwa case, the operators of the mine did a bypass from a different
pole and ran the lines directly into the pit, thereby using power
without paying.
Illegal power connection
The ECG team
discovered an illegal power connection at the mining site, known as
Mohammed Small-scale Mining Company, in Tarkwa in the Tarkwa-Nsuaem
municipality of the Western Region.
Speaking to the Daily
Graphic, the Western Regional Public Relations Officer of the ECG, Mr
Benjamin Quarcoo, said the gang was busted through an informant who was
not comfortable with the situation and reported the matter to officials
of the ECG's Revenue Protection Unit for action.
The ECG, he
said, had, in recent times, declared war on power theft, which remained
one of its challenges in its operational areas, saying: "When it was
time for our team to act on a tip-off by an informant, who was worried
about the unscrupulous activity being carried out by this mining firm,
we acted swiftly."
“As a company, we do not take such acts
lightly. It is a known fact that people who carry out these criminal
acts are in our communities and we need to expose them before they bring
the system to a halt,” he added.
Clampdown
The Managing
Director of the ECG, Mr Kwame Agyeman Budu, said recently he announced
the clampdown on illegal use of power and vowed to reduce the canker to
its barest minimum, added: “I must say that the team at the ECG will
support the drive to ensure success and make illegal use of power a
thing of the past.”
The Western Regional General Manager of the
ECG, Mr Abraham Anokye Abebreseh, encouraged well-meaning Ghanaians to
take advantage of the ECG's full-proof informant protection and reward
scheme to help fight the menace of power theft.
He indicated that
the management’s declaration of absolute war on illegal use of power
would be sustained until the canker had been reduced to the barest
minimum.
Reward scheme
"We have instituted a reward scheme
for persons who provide vital information to expose companies and
persons involved in any form of unauthorised use of power," Mr Abebreseh
said.
He revealed that the informant who led the ECG team to discover the illegality was given a handsome amount of money.
"The
amount was the six per cent reward we promised to pay to anyone who
provides any information leading to a successful bust," he said.
"The
informant gets the reward immediately we find out the information given
is valid and leads to the discovery of the theft," he added. |
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