Trio arrested for vandalizing electric cables connecting Huye water plant

{Police in Huye District is holding three men in connection with vandalizing and stealing underground electric cables connecting Huye mineral water plant in Ngoma Sector.}

Two of the suspects identified as Felicien Nzamurambaho and Vedaste Sibomana, in the night of April 1, allegedly vandalized the cables connecting the water plant to the national grid, leading to power outage at the plant.

The suspects were identified and apprehended by night patrol at about 5am on April 2, as they crossed to the neighbouring Kibirizi Sector in Gisagara District, police said.

The third suspect identified as Salomon Ndikuryayo was arrested later following investigations that linked him to this theft.

He is also said to be one of the people who have been conniving with thieves to buy and sell stolen electric items in Huye and Gisagara districts.

It is said that as the night patrol in Kibirizi were winding up and returning from duty, they met both Nzamurambaho and Sibomana carrying electric cables and they apprehended them before calling police to take up the case.

The suspects were found with 27 metres of the stolen cables, at the time of their arrest.

Police is still searching for Ndikuryayo as an accomplice and dealing in stolen items.

Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Theos Badege, commissioner for Criminal Investigation Department (CID) warned against vandalizing public infrastructures.

He commended the role of night patrols and community policing committees in the fight and prevention of crimes.

“There are two groups involved in such crimes; those who vandalise and steal electric cables and fibre optics or other electric items and those who buy and sell such stolen items, and operations are underway to apprehend such people,” ACP Badege said.

Such acts, he said, are punishable under article 406 of the penal code on “demolishing or damaging another person’s buildings.”

It states that “Any person who willfully destroys or damages in any way, in all or a part, buildings, bridges, dams, water pipes, water pipe routes, roads, railways or any other means of communication or electric power infrastructure, wells or any other buildings which do not belong to him/her, shall be liable to a term of imprisonment of two to five years and a fine of twice to ten times the value of the damaged property.”

“These infrastructures are meant to facilitate doing business and improve the people’s well being, so they should be guarded jealously by everyone,” he said.

He warned of severe consequences to whoever will be caught in such acts, which he said have ill-effects on the country’s development programmes and at times leading to loss of lives as some people are electrocuted while cutting the electric cables.

Jean Pierre Maniraguha, the manager of Energy Utility Corporation Limited (EUCL), Huye branch said that such illegal activities have cost the government of at least Rwf139 million in the last one year alone.

“This is a loss to everyone, right from the country to the last consumer because the money that should been spent on other public infrastructures will be channeled to rehabilitate those that have been destroyed,” said Maniraguha.

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