The Guardian (Nigeria)

Airlines record slow traffic, delays over protests

- Bywole Oyebade

AIR travel operators have further recorded marginal dip in their load factor over ENDSARS protests that are festering nationwide.

The aviation sector that is still battling the after- effects of COVID- 19 lockdown and slow pace of recovery has further slid below the 50 per cent average load factor of the last few weeks.

The developmen­t was compounded by last Thursday’s industrial action and picketing of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria ( FAAN) by the aviation workers’ unions, which grounded all operations for several hours.

Fillers from sector showed that the protests had telling effects on daily operations, with several passengers either arriving late or rescheduli­ng flights, and airlines departing behind schedule.

The Media and Communicat­ions Officer of Dana Air, Kingsley Ezenwa, yesterday, said the effect was quite minimal, though airlines had to strategise to cope with the developmen­t.

Ezenwa said the main impact was flight delays and a drop in load factor.

The Chief Operating Officer of one of the airlines also confirmed the slight drop, though he was more worried about the unions’ protests and disruption to flight operations.

“I think it is shameful that the aviation workers’ unions, major stakeholde­rs and beneficiar­ies of this industry are engaging in actions that are injurious to our collective survival. I think their protests that readily pick on our operations are not good enough.

“They picked on FAAN and went on to disrupt our own operations, forcing everyone to remain on ground. What is the business of private operators with FAAN? You cannot be fighting injustice with new injustices. If they picket FAAN to get their requests, but in the process killed our businesses, how will both FAAN and the workers survive afterwards?”

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