An upset internet customer says he was asked to turn off a life-saving medical alarm for a woman recovering from brain surgery.
But Slingshot, his internet provider, said it expected someone would have been with the woman at the time had the alarm needed to be turned off as part of testing to find a service problem.
The Wellington man, who the Herald on Sunday has agreed not to name, had opened a Slingshot account for his 81-year-old mother, who lived in the South Island.
When he rang to report the internet connection was repeatedly dropping out, he then spent two hours performing checks he said could not have solved the problem.
He said he was told to disconnect all other equipment from the phone, including his mother's medical alarm.