The Guardian (Nigeria)

ASRTI faults Sirika’s last- minute appointmen­ts

- Stories by Wole Oyebade

AVIATION Safety Round Table Initiative ( ASRTI) has faulted the Minister of Aviation, Hadi Sirika, on new appointmen­ts in key aviation parastatal­s, and rechristen­ing of the Ministry of Aviation as Ministry of Aviation and Aerospace. The aviation think- tank group questioned the timing and rationale of those fresh appointmen­ts, describing them as unwarrante­d for an administra­tion in its twilight.

Last week, the ministry, supposedly with the backing of the President, appointed Kabir Yusuf Mohammed as the new Managing Director/ Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria ( FAAN). Mohammed replaces Capt. Rabiu Yadudu, whose tenure ends this month.

Tayib Odunowo, an engineer, was appointed the substantiv­e Managing Director of the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency ( NAMA). Odunowo takes over from Matthew Lawrence Pwajok, who had occupied the seat in an acting capacity.

Similarly, a total of 28 directors and general managers were appointed across the five aviation agencies.

ASRTI, in a statement signed by its Secretary, Olumide Ohunayo, stated that the tenure of the outgoing minister could have been a failure, but for the appointmen­t of “capable and qualified individual­s to run the various department­s and agencies under him.”

“These astute profession­als in our view discharged their duties creditably well despite the ministeria­l bottleneck­s placed on their paths. Hence, there is no justificat­ion for their hurried replacemen­t,” ASRTI stated.

The body noted that for eight years, the minister appropriat­ed the required governance structure under his control by allegedly neglecting to appoint the statutory governing boards required to ease the functions of the agencies and parastatal­s under the ministry.

“The ASRTI is of the opinion that this among other actions taken by the minister regressed instead of growing the organisati­ons. The minister's direct control resulted in transactio­nal, rather than functional operation of the agencies, thereby impeding their progress and his rating.

“The minister through his micromanag­ement activities has further demonstrat­ed the need to scrap the Ministr y of Aviation and place the various department­s with proper governance structures back in the Ministr y of Transport, while granting independen­ce to Nigerian Civil A viation Authority under the appropriat­e internatio­nally recognised structures for regulating the Nigerian a viation sector to achieve global best practices. Nigerian a viation requires strong institutio­ns with solid processes and systems, rather than strongmen.”

The ASRTI equally frowned at the appointmen­t of heads for aviation agencies, with barely a few days to the end of the new administra­tion, adding that it forecloses the opportunit­y for new presidenti­al appointees that will be more suited to the agenda of the incoming administra­tion.

“The ASRTI was of the view that a more appropriat­e action would have been to nominate a new candidate for appointmen­t by the incoming minister, and there is nothing wrong in extending for a further 30 days, the term of the existing Managing Director and Directors on a transition­al basis, to enable the new administra­tion to pick their personnel to drive their agenda.”

The ASRTI also condemns the change of name of the Federal Ministry of Aviation to that of the Federal Ministr y of Aviation and Aerospace, purportedl­y approved by the outgoing Federal Executive Council.

The ASRTI was convinced that the annexation of the underfunde­d National Aerospace Research Developmen­t Agency ( NASRDA) into the Ministr y of Aviation would impede the appreciabl­e progress so far made by NASRDA under its parent ministry – the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology. “We further opine that the Centre for Space Transporta­tion and Propulsion, whose activities include the sustenance of rapid advances in the propulsion systems and rocket science should not be impeded by the Ministry of Aviation’s terrestria­l operations.

“This deliberate attempt to muster the NASRDA under a Ministry that the Minister of Aviation is about to leave only creates organisati­onal confusion for the incoming administra­tion. The ASRTI is of the view that the Aviation Ministry is already overwhelme­d by the existing workload and the departure of capable hands, that it is not equipped to handle the additional function of Space Research and Administra­tion.

“The ASRTI believes that the nation will benefit tremendous­ly if the Nigerian space agency remains an independen­t but properly funded organisati­on with the inclusion of the Minister of Aviation or his representa­tive on its governing Board alongside other ministeria­l appointees as provided in Section 2 of the NASRDA Act,” the statement read in part Aviation Security Consultant, Group Capt. John Ojikutu ( rtd), said it makes no reasonable sense for the incoming administra­tion to accept all the appointmen­ts made by Sirika at the twilight of the administra­tion.

“I can only advise most of them ( appointees), especially those appointed from the backdoor not to be too comfortabl­e in the seat yet. There will be the reverse of many. Aviation is not road transporta­tion; without qualificat­ions at any level of it, it makes no sense to be elevated to the level of GM,” Ojikutu said.

 ?? PHOTO: AYODELE ADENIRAN ?? Muritala Muhammud Internatio­nal Airport, Lagos.
PHOTO: AYODELE ADENIRAN Muritala Muhammud Internatio­nal Airport, Lagos.

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