Filling Station Fined N4.2 Million For Hoarding Petrol

A committee set up by Kano State governor, Abdullahi Ganduje, to prevent hoarding of petrol and selling above official rate, has fined a Forte Oil filling station in the state the sum of N4.2million.

The state commissioner for ?c?commerce, Rabiu Bako, who is the chairman of the committee, told our correspondent ?by phone that the station was fined for both hoarding of the product and selling above pump price at night.

Mr. Bako said the stipulated penalty for a filling station found hiding petroleum products and selling above pump price was to make it pay fine by doubling the official pump price of their existing product.

He added that at the time of the clamp down, the station had already disposed of 26,000 litres from the 34,000 litres allocated to it.

The commissioner said when they multiplied the cost of the available litres with the surcharge, they arrived at N4.2million.

Mr. Bako also disclosed that they found another filling station, A.Y. Maikifi Petroleum, filling the product into gallons for black marketers.

He said the station manager was reprimanded for under-dealing.

Credit: PremiumTimes

Abuja Electricity Fined N18m Over Girl’s Death

The Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) has been sanctioned sanctions for negligence that resulted in the electrocution of an eight-year-old girl, Faith Yakubu, at Anguwan Dodo, Gwagwalada, in the Federal Capital Territory.

The electricity??y distribution company was found guilty of the offence and fined N18 million by the regulatory authority, the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).

The Commission said the accident occurred when a staff of AEDC disconnected the wires feeding the residence of one of its consumers over alleged non-payment of accumulated electricity bills.

The disconnected electricity wires were left loosely on the ground by a technical staff without disconnecting the source of electricity supply from the transformer.

The Commission said little Faith had, unknown to her, grabbed the naked wires with her bare hands in an attempt to cross over them while running an errand for the parents.

The child was electrocuted along with a four-month-old boy she strapped on her back.

While the young girl was lost her life, the baby on her back survived the accident.

The Commission said in Abuja on Monday that it had upheld the recommendations in the report on the Panel on Accident Investigation set up to investigate the incident.

The panel had found the distribution company culpable of negligence which resulted in the electrocution of the young girl in a location within the company’s franchise area.

Credit: PremiumTimes