Thursday 30 January 2014

Kumuyi Task Youths, Students On Discipline, Transformation

Pastor WF Kumuyi
The general superintendent (GS) of the Deeper Christian Life Ministry and Deeper Life Bible Church (worldwide), Pastor William F. Kumuyi, has called on youths and students across the country to live a life of discipline.

Kumuyi, who stated this in Abuja at the weekend during his visit to students of the Deeper Life High School, said the transformation of the students is the end result of the whole process of going through the four walls of school.

According to him, “Discipline is the pivot of the life of a student” adding that, no matter how studious you are if you don’t have discipline, nothing will come out and you are not going to achieve anything in life. But with discipline you will get to the top of the mountain.

The renowned man of God who was in Abuja since on Thursday, for series of programmes in the church – Workers Strategy Congress for the middle-Belt, FCT Great Miracle Revival Service and his regular Monday Bible Study –  described the acronym meaning of a student as being studious, teachable, unique, disciplines, enlightened, noteworthy and transformed.

The pastor of the largest single congregation church in Africa, told the students that big things start in small ways and admonished them know that God is preparing them for great future and a place in the leadership of the country.

Spelling the word student with seven letter words, he said, it represents completeness and being a student make the student complete. He said, “Those young people that never go to school, they will never be complete. You cannot be anything significant in life without being a student.

He said, “Discipline is the scale that strikes a balance, it is the fulcrum and the pivot of the student life. No matter how studious you are if you don’t have discipline, nothing will come out and without discipline one is not going to make anything in life.”

“I am disciplined, I know that the class is to state at this time, I don’t need anybody to remind me, I don’t need anybody to come to the hotel to shout me out. Discipline comes from the inside and so when some others who are not disciplined are doing something that is not in my subject are, I look the other way.

“Immorality, does not relate to my subject area, boy friend, girl friend, exam malpractice are not in my subject areas. But when it comes to being upright, righteous and living the life that is pleasing to God, that is when I talk. And when the teacher is taking, the student won’t be talking at the same time, because I am a disciplined student.”

On the transformation of the student, Pastor Kumuyi said, “How do people come into the school as a rough and raw material and become transformed as a medical doctor, engineer and leader in the society. That is the end result of the whole process.

“If you are studious, teachable, unique, disciplined, enlightened and noteworthy, and you are not transformed, it means you wasted your life in school as a student.”

Poor Record of Manual Billing: The Cesspit Of Electricity Revenues

Just like my colleague, Juliet Alohan, who ought to know better but couldn’t place it on what to call the present electricity providers in the nation’s Capital City in one of her recent Facebook post, I am understandably lost too, as well as many others out there on the new nomenclature.

Right now, I must confess that I am pissed and pained with the current poor state of electricity generation, transmission and distribution capacity as it affects where I am presently residing, that is Mpape in particularly and the country in general.

And I hear the nameless electricity providers in league with the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) and the Presidential Task Force on Power together with the ministry of power are planning to hike electricity tariff by a huge percentage in view of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) proposed plan to cut gas supply by 50 per cent.

I then ask, is there a sabotage somewhere or is it a deliberate ploy by cabals of the old order or should I call it old block, who were displeased with the sale of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), to discredit the minister of power, Professor Chinedu Nebo, especially if his assurances of supply is anything to go by.

In Mpape, where I live, things have in recent times taken turn for the worst. Electricity supply which used to be three days on and one day off, has declined to one day on and one day off. Right now, as I have observed in the last one week, it is a half day on and the next day total blackout. It is now a case where electricity props up at times around 2, 3 or 4pm and goes off 8am the next day.

And it is beginning to look like the cheery news that greeted the sale of PHCN to private operators as a result of the ongoing reform in the power sector is taking forever to bear any tangible fruit, because, instead of improving, it is getting worst by the day. Maybe in February, as the dry season bites harder, we may end up going a whole week or month with electricity propping up in our homes ones.

The billing system is not helping matter. It is a matter of worry and is fraught with suspicion, because what is on ground now does not promote accountability and probity. Things are muddled up in terms of revenue that is being generated. Or what do you say about a situation where over 80 per cent of customers especially in my area are on the manual billing platform, which I believe is at the core of promoting embezzlement and corruption. And I also believe that those in charge of collecting the money do not remit all the revenues to the authorities.

My apartment is not exempted from the manual billing system and recently a drama ensued when I went to the nearby outlet of the electricity providers to pay my bill after I was temporarily disconnected the previous day. The cashier on duty flared off and vehemently refused to collect the money I brought, insisting I must provide evidence of last payment. According to her, how could she possibly believe my claim without providing a proof? Of course, she was right, but wait a minute, where is her records, which could be referred to when in doubt and save us the time of argument.

But the alarming fact is that, there were no such records of payment by all the customers on the manual billing platform who throng the outlet, which could have served as reference point in the event of doubt like in my case. We all are human beings, we can forget and possibly misplace vital documents, but proper filing and good record keeping could be the only saving grace. The manual billing thing has no records and no one knows whose pocket the huge unaccounted resources go into in the long run.

For instance, on several occasions I will visit the DSTV outlet in my area to renew my monthly subscription without my ID number, but without asking question, I will proceed straight to the record book on the couch, where all transactions on a daily basis are kept, to check for my name and any other information I want. And without much delay I am done. With this kind of record, auditors can go through your books and save the time of unnecessary interrogation.

No wonder, we hear of missing estimated huge amount of billions of Naira every now and then. And proposals of trillions of Naira need to fix the power sector have remained a mirage. When do we come out of this merry go round thing and turn a new leaf of making customers of this important product forget the darkness they are daily subjected to today?

And so missing funds will continue unabated as long as manual billing thrives because it has become the cesspit of electricity revenues. Especially as such practice goes on without proper recording keeping of payments. This is in the in-thing in my area and in several other areas in Abuja and most parts of the country. No record of payment exists in my area, where customers queue up from Monday-Friday to settle their electricity bills.

The officers are only careful with those customers on the electronic platform, and from what I was told, one need to settle officials heavily before they can upgrade you to the electronic billing platform, because nothing goes comes to them after payment is made electronically. This simply means that millions of naira generated from Mpape and other areas where manual billing is operated ends up in the pockets of individuals unaccounted for, starting from the cashier (who normally looks well fed), other field officers (marketers) and their ‘ogas at the top’.

Back to my encounter, eventually, I waited for the marketers assigned to the location where I live and things were shortly sorted out, I made the payment and guess to whom, of course, the marketers, who I learnt will remit same to the cashier and get the receipt back to me. The electricity for my apartment was restored after I paid N1,500 (instead of N2,000) reconnection fee with ‘abeg’. In this area customers pay between N3,000 and N4,000 for a compound of two to four flats monthly to ‘enjoy uninterrupted’ power supply.

The question bugging my curious mind now, apart from seeking answers to why the poor state of electricity distribution persist, is when are we going to get it right, especially when simply accounting procedure is ignored with reckless abandon.

Electricity workers, it seems have device their own means of milking unsuspecting electricity-starved customers of their hard earned money without providing commensurate services, using the manual billing platform without keeping records of such payments. This is corruption of the highest level, even though is at the grassroots. And it is unacceptable. The authorities must tackle this abuse of payment processes immediately and put a stop to this brought day light robbery. Even banks where almost everything has gone digital and electronic, it still practices this acceptable tradition accounting process, keeping manual entry of bank transactions for record purposes.

Today it is an acceptable practice, that whether there is electricity or not, the marketers make it a point of duty to visit homes of customers from 12th to 20th of the next month to disconnect power line of customers who are yet to pay their ‘electricity’ bill, without providing explanation to why distribution has worsen.

The questions again are, should customers, therefore, continue to pay for this glaring darkness? What is NERC regulating in the face of this flagrant breach of customers’ satisfaction? Is the NERC regulating the generation, transmission, distribution electricity or is it the billing/tariff? Whatever it is that is being regulated, it is high time for answers to be given and necessary actions taken by the appropriate authorities, before someone is shown the way out.


Lest we forget, I still need a name to call the present electricity providers in the FCT, because I am still in doubt. If it is not NEPA, PHCN, GENCO, what else can we call it?