KOTA KINABALU: Sabah
Electricity Sdn Bhd (SESB) will allow foreigners to be registered users
provided they have valid travel documents and identifications.
Its General Manager
(Distribution) Ahmad Sazree Abd Aziz said only foreigners who enter the country
legally are eligible for power supply.
"They could also apply
for the electric meters to be under their names if they get permission from
their respective landlords.
"However illegal immigrants
cannot become our registered users as they have documentation problems,"
he said.
Ahmad Sazree said this
during an operation to disconnect illegal tapping of power at 135 houses in Kg
Pulau Penampang, Kg Delima and Kg Suang Parai along Sulaman road, Monday.
The operation also revealed
SESB incurred losses of about RM4,100 per month from these illegal connections
and about 50kg of wire were removed from the three urban villages. He also
visited a scene where Mokhsin Sibok, in his 20s, was found dead in a monsoon
drain in Kg Suang Parai on Friday. He was suspected to have died from
electrocution while fixing a PVC pipe very close to the drain.
SESB enforcement personnel
conducted the operation together with the Energy Commission and SESB auxiliary
police.
According to him, illegal
immigrants were primarily the power thieves in the squatter areas.
To prevent illegal power
connection, Ahmad Sazree said the agency will continue to educate and remind
the public that such action could cause the loss of lives and endanger other
people.
"These power thieves
would hide the illegal wire connection in places where the public including
children would walk and pass through.
"Without knowing the
danger, anyone can be victims of these illegal connection as the wire would not
be installed properly," he said.
Ahmad Sazree said SESB
recorded two tragedies this year involving two men who died from electrocution
while installing illegal wire connections in Kolombong and in Lahad Datu.
On the recent case where the
local man died after apparently coming into contact with illegal connection at
Kg Suang Parai, he said the incident was the third such case in Sabah.
"We visited the scene
where the body was found floating on the monsoon drain in the village.
I saw some PVC pipes
containing the illegal wire connections inside the drain.
"Therefore we suspected
the man had possibly died due to electrocution when fixing the water
pipes," he said.
Ahmad Sazree said it is a
challenge for the agency to keep addressing villages known for resorting to
illegal power connection but that it would never give up. He said a total of 94
squatter settlements in the State have been identified as being still active in
making illegal power connections.
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