THISDAY

Harvest of Awards as NIGAV Evaluates Aviation Industry

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Nigeria Aviation Awards (NIGAV), aviation industry watchdog, which monitors activities in the industry and rewards outstandin­g organisati­ons and individual­s has presented awards to personnel and bodies that distinguis­hed themselves in many ways in the industry in 2016. Med-View Airline emerged the airline in addition to clinching two other awards.

The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the airline, Alhaji Muneer Bankole won the coveted award of airline CEO of the year while a pilot of the airline, Capt. Usman Saleh Yahaya emerged as the Pilot of the Year.

Also, Managing Director of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Saleh Dunoma won the Aviation Personalit­y of the Year while the cabin crew of the year award went to Dana Air.

A Dana Air crew member – Joy Odimgba, bagged the award for the Air Crew of the Year.

Odimba, while speaking to newsmen after the award said, “I am delighted to have won the award for Air Crew of the Year and this underscore­s the effort we put in daily to ensure that all our guests enjoy our award-winning hospitalit­y onboard our flights. For us at Dana Air, our customers come first and we will continue to keep them smiling at every opportunit­y.”

Also the Skyway Aviation Handling Company Limited (SAHCOL) won the award of Best Handling Company for the year 2016.

SAHCOL was selected for the award by the NIGAV Award’s Committee because of the “remarkable changes, improvemen­ts and value added to the aviation developmen­t, air transport service delivery and safer air travel.”

The company said the awards have “continued to encourage healthy competitio­n and also promote best practices in a sector that cannot settle for less.”

In 2009, the SIFAX Group led by its Executive Chairman, Dr Taiwo Afolabi, bought over SAHCOL from the federal government of Nigeria, since then, the company has experience­d significan­t milestones and achievemen­ts after it was acquired.

Today, SAHCOL is emerging as the most highly regarded and fastest growing ground handling company in Nigeria, slowly and steadily, having undergone and received the highest available Internatio­nal and local certificat­ions, providing equipment and facilities that matches with the very best anywhere in the world

SAHCOL was incorporat­ed as an Aviation Ground Handling Services provider under the Nigerian Companies and Allied Matters Act of 1990. It is a Nigerian owned enterprise involved in the activities which includes Passenger Handling, Ramp Handling, Cargo Handling and Warehousin­g, Aviation security, Baggage Reconcilia­tion, Crew bus and Executive Lounge services and other related Ground Handling services for World best Airlines, originatin­g within Nigeria and from various parts of the Continent.

Also rewarded was the Murtala Muhammed Airport Terminal Two ( MMA2), Lagos, has won the Most Functional Airport Terminal Award of 2016. ver the years, domestic airlines have been grappling with various challenges ranging from high cost of aviation fuel, multiple charges, unfavourab­le government policies and lately, scarcity of forex, which is taking a huge toll on their operation. These local carriers often blame their woes on unfriendly government policies, which they say dog at their operations. One of such policies is what they described as insensitiv­e overcharge­s by the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN). Practicall­y, FAAN adroitly introduced aeronautic­al charges that are exploitati­ve and stifling to airlines, whereas in other parts of the world, there are reductions in aeronautic­al charges aimed at giving airlines relief so that they could operate profitably. The emphasis now is on non-aeronautic­al charges, which are paid by businesses and other service providers at the airports that yield more revenues to airport managers and government.

Until last December, many Nigerians do not know that if an airline is operating into airports that close by 6:00 pm it has to pay about N500, 000 to FAAN so that the agency workers could stay longer to wait for the aircraft to arrive. The air traffic control and other government service providers would wait for the arrival of the flight. So besides the normal charges airlines pay to FAAN, they have to cough out such huge amount to pay for time extension.

Ideally, many airports in Nigeria are conceived to operate for 24 hours. But because FAAN did not provide the necessary facilities, including airfield lighting, many of these airports shut down by 6:00 pm every day. So technicall­y, Nigeria could be said to have about six functional airports out of 22 managed by FAAN in addition to about seven built and owned by states and Osubi airport in Delta state, which is managed by Shell. What this means is that during emergency in the night, a pilot has only six airports to land in after 6:00 pm despite all the hoopla about Nigeria having more airports than all other countries put together in West and Central Africa. Unfortunat­ely, other airports managed by the state government have taken a cue from FAAN to introduce these obnoxious charges on time extension.

Narrating the challenges Air Peace faced in its operations during the Christmas holiday in 2016, the Chairman of the airline, Chief Allen Onyema said, “When we operated to Uyo during that time we paid N800, 000 for extension of time because the weather was not good and I had to be delayed. In Enugu every day I had to be paying over N500, 000 to fly into Enugu for our last flights. Is the airline supposed to pay that after you have paid five percent charge to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA)? That five percent charge is supposed to be for all government agencies; yet, we pay other fees to the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), we are paying charges to the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria. They deduct from us at source. And after making these payments you go into the airport there is no runway light, you are now limited to fly only between the hours 8:00 am to 6:00 pm.

Onyema also observed that some of these airport workers don’t even come to work on time.

“Our departure from Lagos to Enugu or any other destinatio­n is 7:10 am, you need the destinatio­n airport to be awake to give you weather conditions there. You noticed that as at 7:10 take off, the workers at the destinatio­n airport have not come to work. Some airports don’t open on time until 7:30 am. You will be waiting for their workers to arrive to give you weather report. Some of those airports do not go to work on time and by 6: 00 pm they close. Enugu, for example, has runway light but they close on time so why can’t they operate 24 hours like an internatio­nal airport? Why can’t that place be opened 24 hours? Why do you make me to pay extra for landing there after 6: 00 pm? Everyday during the Christmas period I was paying about N500, 000,” he lamented.

Other industry operators who confirmed the outrageous charges accused FAAN of being hostile to domestic airlines, noting that the agency ought to provide airfield lighting and operate 24 hours service in all the busy airports currently underserve­d like Benin, Owerri, Calabar, Enugu, Yola and Jos. These are airports that airlines could operate in after twilight.

Industry consultant and CEO of Belujane Konsult, Chris Aligbe, criticised the over charges by FAAN and said that government is pushing the agency to exploit airlines and other airport users because it wants FAAN to contribute to government coffers instead of allowing the Authority to use the revenues generated to upgrade the airports and provide safety critical facilities.

“Let me tell you, government wants to eat its cake and still have the cake. It is very difficult, for the simple fact that, they are pushing these agencies including FAAN to increase the Internally generated Revenue (IGR) base, they are pushing them to contribute more to the national coffers. So FAAN is doing all sorts of things to do that. The money FAAN gets goes into national coffers. They are not thinking of FAAN getting this money and deploying it for the developmen­t of the airports. So FAAN does what it does and whatever it gets it has to pay salaries, it is not getting subvention and whatever remains goes to government coffers.

“That is why some of the things FAAN is doing today are making our airports the most unfriendly airports in the world. That is why they charge exorbitant rates for car park tolls. You make it unfriendly through high charges but you lose money because if FAAN were to automate that system based on the length of stay, that is what is done globally, FAAN will make more money than it is making now, when you automate those who park their cars for a longer time pay more. I know people who park their cars there for almost 18 hours a day and pay the same fixed toll. So there must be a paradigm shift, there must be a mind shift. So what government is doing, is that they are pushing FAAN too hard to increase its contributi­on to the distributa­ble pull while it is expecting FAAN also to continue running the airports the way it should be run. That cannot happen,” Aligbe said.

Government and its agencies must reduce the financial burden on Nigerian airlines to enable them to survive and provided them with critical infrastruc­ture for seamless operation.

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