THISDAY

C’ttee Seeks Extension for Submission of Report on Accidental Bombing of IDP Camp

Panel submits report on Donnier crash

- In Abuja

Paul Obi

The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) committee entrusted with the investigat­ion of the accidental bombing of an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp in Rann, Borno State, has appealed for an extension in order to thoroughly investigat­e the incident.

The committee headed by the NAF’s Chief of Standard and Evaluation, Air Vice Marshal Salihu Bala-Ribbah, was inaugurate­d in January and mandated to submit its report on February 2, 2017.

The Chief of the Air Staff, (CAS), Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar, told journalist­s yesterday in Abuja that “the committee has asked for an extension of its mandate in order to get all the facts.”

The air chief added that “the committee has visited the affected area, interviewe­d all the relevant people and in the process of putting down a report.”

Also, NAF revealed that a special trend described “as ‘Special Disorienta­tion’ was responsibl­e for the tragic crash of the Donnier 228 aircraft with tail number NAF 030 which crashed after take-off in Kaduna on August 29, 2015.”

The Chairman of a special investigat­ion panel and NAF’s Director of Safety, Air Vice Marshal Sampson Akpasa, added that “detailed investigat­ions by the manufactur­ers of the aircraft revealed that there was nothing wrong with the engine.

Akpasa stated: “We shipped the engine to the manufactur­ers, Honeywell Aerospace in Arizona USA, two board members observed the tear down of the engines between October 30 to November 4, 2015.

“Also, analysis on the fuel used by the aircraft was done by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) and we found that both engines were working well at the time of the accident also, the fuel was found to be safe,” he stressed.

The incident resulted in seven occupants of the aircraft sustaining fatal injuries, the aircraft was also damaged.

Akpasa also said investigat­ion is ongoing on an F7Ni incident in Yola in 2016, stating that, “unexploded ordinance carried by the aircraft was buried undergroun­d and has not been exhume.

“On the Augusta 101 helicopter which crashed in Markudi in October 2016, he said parts of the aircraft have been flown to the United Kingdom and Canada for analysis.”

Abubakar speaking on the Donnier aircraft explained that “there was no engine problem, what happened was special disorienta­tion, it is a phenomenon in flying and we are training more safety officers to monitor our flying activities.

“On the F7 jet, the pilot died and investigat­ions are ongoing, we will get the necessary support from the manufactur­ers to get a conclusive investigat­ion. The NAF will continue to build capacity, train and get the best of the equipment in our care.”

In another developmen­t, participan­ts at the first Nigerian Army Research and Innovation Summit bemoaned the absence of enabling legislatio­n in support of military research and innovation.

This was made known at the end of a three-day deliberati­on which featured members of the armed forces, academia, private security companies and equipment manufactur­ers and lawmakers

The participan­ts tasked the National Assembly to pass into law, the bill on National Policy on Research, Developmen­t and Innovation before the end of the third quarter of 2017.

The summit with the theme, ‘Research and Innovation: Developing Synergy with Indigenous Institutio­ns for Enhanced Capacity in the Nigerian Army,’ was geared towards leveraging on government policies and programmes in support of research and innovation.

In the communiqué issued at the end of the summit said participan­ts “recognized the need for effective research and innovation towards the enhancemen­t of Nigeria’s military capacity and closing the technology gap through the adoption of reverse engineerin­g and re-engineerin­g methods.”

The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lieutenant General Tukur Buratai, who applauded the commitment of participan­ts at the end of the summit, explained that the event addresses the core mandate of the Nigerian Army.

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