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Woman on oxygen dies after power cut off

Family says death of 44-year-old New Zealander was due to unpaid bill

IMAGE: Folole Muliaga
AP
An undated family photo shows Folole Muliaga, who died Tuesday. Muliaga's family says her death came after an energy company cut the power to her home, disconnecting the electric oxygen pump she needed to breathe.
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Power cut death
May 30: A mother of four on oxygen support dies less than two hours after the power to her home is cut off. MSNBC.com's Dara Brown reports.

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updated 10:41 a.m. ET May 30, 2007

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - A 44-year-old woman who needed an electric oxygen pump to breathe died after an energy company cut the power to her home because of an unpaid bill, her family claimed Wednesday.

Police said they had launched an investigation into Folole Muliaga’s death, which happened within two hours of state-owned company Mercury Energy cutting power to her house Tuesday.

Mercury Energy’s general manager, James Moulder, said the company was devastated by the woman’s death and was conducting its own investigation to determine what happened. He refused to say how much money Muliaga had owed the company.

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Muliaga, a schoolteacher with four children between the ages of 5 and 20, had been off work since February with an illness.

A Mercury Energy representative arrived on Tuesday at her home in the northern city of Auckland to disconnect the electricity, said Brenden Sheehan, Muliaga’s nephew-in-law.

‘Then he cut the power off’
Sheehan said both Muliaga and her son told the technician she was dependent on the oxygen machine to stay alive and invited him into the house to see it. “Then he cut the power off,” Sheehan told The Associated Press.

Muliaga began having difficulty breathing, became faint and then collapsed, he said. Paramedics were unable to revive her, and she was pronounced dead within two hours of the power being cut.

Moulder expressed his “deep condolences” to the family, and said the company was checking reports that it had been warned Muliaga needed power for the oxygen machine. The company restored electricity to the house on Wednesday after learning of her death.

Sheehan said the family’s bills would prove Muliaga was trying to pay the account, and received no warning the power would be shut off. He declined to say how much she owed.

State Owned Enterprises Minister Trevor Mallard said there were reports the family had been warned about the overdue account.

“The correct authority to investigate this and sort out the facts is the police,” Mallard said, adding the government would expect “full accountability” if the company was found to be culpable.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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