THISDAY

ABDULLAHI: CLOSURE OF ABUJA AIRPORT WILL NOT EXCEED SIX WEEKS

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bodied aircraft, the two that they have, we want to see those aircraft back in the system. Once they do that I am positive that the internatio­nal operations will resume and things will be looking up. But for now it looks very bleak and so they need prayers, the new management of Arik need prayers and we are praying very hard for them and guiding them and showing them the way and generally we bend over backwards to be of assistance to them because Civil Aviation Authoritie­s (CAAs) all over the world are supposed to grow the industry, so in doing that we help them.

Talking about growing the industry, an operator that is into charter said if NCAA decides to carry out economic regulation, insists that airlines pay all the debt, pay salary as at when due, that almost all the airlines will be shutdown. That what is happening in the economy is reflecting on the airlines. What is your reaction to that?

We agree but as a CAA the major contention we have with the airlines is this 5% charge that they have refused pay. The 5% is not really a charge on the airlines; it is the passengers that pay that money. And we have tried to make the airlines understand that all they are doing is to collect government revenue on behalf of government. So give us back what is due to us so that we can oversight you because NCAA does not get kobo from the government. We depend on that 5% that we get to run all our affairs.

The issue of salary is something that is also contentiou­s because, the pilot, the crew and even the engineer that you have not paid his salary is an accident waiting to happen. This is because his mind will not be on his work. Remember vividly the Associated aircraft accident; that was what the pilot and the co-pilot were discussing before they crashed. It was on record that was what they were discussing. So these are things that we have to really take seriously and know that the airlines must pay their staff salaries.

That is the only one we are very, very insistent on. The other ones are really commercial decisions; we don’t come into it. If they owe their fuel suppliers for instance, their caterers, the handling companies, we will advise them to pay something, even our own we keep telling them to pay some amount. It is only when they come to renew their Air Operator Certificat­es (AOCs), renew pilot license, crew licenses, that we will tell them to come and pay what they owe.

Now there are fewer aircraft and more passengers with Arik down, what is the impact of that to passengers because fares are high?

Fares are very high, I just bought to and fro ticket to Kano from Lagos on Azman Air N40, 000 to Kano and N35, 000 return, that is N75, 000. It is not everybody that can afford that because you know what people are facing. It is not air fare that is exactly everybody’s priority at the moment, everybody wants to eat, that is the most important thing for now. So it is an issue of demand and supply, the aircraft are not there like you pointed out and then the cost of operation also is very high. If Jet A1 goes for N280 per liter you should expect that you must pay a very high rate. If most of the crew we have to pay in dollars and you know the cost of dollar now, spare parts come in dollars, the aircraft itself, insurance, almost everything in aviation is in dollars. And dollar has gone hare wire; therefore it is a reflection of what is going on generally in the country that is also happening in aviation.

Things have started looking up because we have seen how the dollar issue is now stabilizin­g and with that we expect that we will have a better business climate and we are hopeful that it will now enable airlines to service their aircraft. We are waiting for their return of the ones that were ferried overseas, so we are very hopeful that now they will have the wherewitha­l to bring back these aircraft so that they can join their fleet.

What do you think would be the impact on the air travel market generally in Nigeria, considerin­g the long term consequenc­e of limited aircraft in service, the high fares and the recession?

For a very long time aviation has been trying to woo passengers from other modes of transport, unfortunat­ely Nigeria does not have a very active railway service so everything that happens, happens by road. The road has also become really tough because the roads are really bad and the security challenges are there when you go by road and the fares are really much higher than they used to be even going by road. So it is going to be very difficult to woo back most of the passengers once they leave aviation because once you taste road, you find out you can travel cheaper and you find that you arrived in one piece to your destinatio­n you will be tempted to try again. But nothing will ever beat aviation because it is the fastest mode of transporta­tion and the safest means of transport; therefore, nothing beats it. With time everything will still come back to aviation.

What advice do you have for the passenger as a regulatory body and what word do you have for the final movement from Kaduna to Abuja after the closure?

Well, the government has done its own beat, a lot of effort has gone into putting Kaduna in shape and I would say that, that is a job well done. We should give ourselves kudos. The Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) has done what it’s supposed to do, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has been there permanentl­y, in fact the Managing Director moved there permanentl­y and most of his directors are on ground. And I would say so far they have done a wonderful job. Kaduna State government came in, and came in a very, very big way because some things that looked impossible in the Nigeria have happened. They have done the roads, the roads from the airport to the rail station are almost done, I am positive that by Monday (March 13) that road will be commission­ed. That road also leaves the railway station and comes out to the bypass and the bypass has also been done. The Kaduna- Abuja road as you have noted has also been commission­ed and they have finished all the patched work.

So once the roads are there and you even have an alternativ­e of railway and the Nigeria Railway Corporatio­n (NRC) has promised that they are going to add more trains and coaches on the Abuja-Kaduna rail line, I believe that we don’t envisage having any problems. The buses are ready to convey the passengers, helicopter services are also coming up to provide service for those that can afford it at N50,000 and some people can afford that, so they can go ahead.

In terms of security, the police have planned it in a very good way. They will deploy helicopter service there. They are going to survey the environmen­t from up there to make sure that passengers are safe. There won’t be check points per say, but there will be police presence; they will be monitoring and seeing what is going on. The Federal Road Safety (FRSC) will control traffic whenever there is any hiccups, they will be there to direct traffic. So we don’t envisage having any problems. Whatever happens, we are talking of six weeks; six weeks is really a short while if you come to think of it. So this is something that we believe will come to pass. So we implore passengers to exercise a lot of restraint, plan their journeys very well.

 ??  ?? Abdullahi
Abdullahi

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