The power outage in Bayelsa and parts of Rivers
was the handiwork of youths who shut down a transmission station at Ahoada in
Rivers state.
Mr John Onyi, Manager, Corporate Communications
at Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution Company (PHEDC) who confirmed the
development said that the utility company was incapacitated by the restive youths
who threw the public into darkness.
Residents in Bayelsa and adjoining parts of
Rivers served by the shut transmission station located in Ahoada community in
Rivers have remained without power supply since January 23.
Onyi said that efforts of the utility firm to
dialogue with the youths who allegedly attacked the station to protest
irregular power supply were unsuccessful urged the Bayelsa government to wade
into the issue.
“Therefore, the management of Port Harcourt
Electricity Distribution Company, PHEDC, is calling on the security agencies
and indeed the government of Bayelsa State to wade into the matter.
“The forceful closure of Transmission Station
located inside Ahoada by a group of Ahoada Youth has led to complete loss of
power supply to Yenagoa, the Bayelsa state capital.
“The forced outage has not only affected the
state capital but the adjoining communities in the state and some parts of
Rivers state namely Isiokpo, Emuoha, Elele, among others.
“The stick wielding youth came out en masse
early Tuesday morning, chanting war songs, blocked and barricaded the
Transmission Station with fetish items and in the process forced the operators
on duty to switch off the entire station.
“This action of the youth led to the loss on
132kv lines supplying power to Yenagoa and ever since then, all effort
made by the management of PHEDC, to get the matter resolved has been met with further
threats from the youths,” Onyi said.
The PHEDC official lamented that protests in the
Niger Delta region over load allocation from the National Grid which leads to
realistic systemic load shedding by the DISCO is becoming too many.
He noted that residents have always demanded for
24 hour power supply without corresponding payments and efforts made by the
company to explain the electricity value chain appear not to be understood.
“Surprisingly, debt profile as at December 2017
in Ahoada stood at over N7.6 billion, yet the youth has not deemed it necessary
to tell their people that the outstanding debt should be settled.
“Electricity has been misconstrued in some
quarters to be free and not to be paid for, whereas it is not so,” Onyi said.
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