July 14, 2009 Tuesday
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July 14, 2009
Fatwa on theft of electricity

KARACHI - A PAKISTANI power utility has obtained a decree from top Islamic scholars condemning electricity theft, which it says is costing it millions of dollars a year.

The Karachi Electric Supply Co (KESC) said it has obtained a fatwa, or decree, from 12 top Islamic scholars, who declared the theft of power a sin.

'It is astonishing and disturbing to find that certain segments of our society do not even consider theft of electricity 'theft', let alone immoral or illegal,' said KESC spokesman Ayesha Eirabie.

Typically, people steal electricity by hooking up a wire to overhead electricity cables, siphoning off power without paying for it. Another way people steal power is to slow down their electricity metres.

The KESC, in which Dubai-based Abraaj Capital has a controlling stake, supplies electricity to Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city with more than 16 million people.

Ms Eirabie said electricity theft was causing the KESC losses of billions of rupees a year. Most of the people who steal electricity could afford to pay for it but choose not to, she said.

'It is very important for such people to know that the theft of electricity is illegal, immoral and not acceptable as is any other form of theft,' she said.

According to the decree, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, the illicit use of any commodity is a sin.

And as in this case the organisation producing electricity represented many people, its use without permission and pay made it an even bigger sin, the clerics said. 'Legal action against such people committing electricity theft is fair,' they said.

Karachi, like the rest of Pakistan, has faced chronic electricity supply problems. Residents frustrated by black-outs often vent their anger by blocking roads, burning tyres and throwing stones at police. -- REUTERS

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