THISDAY

Sirika Promises to Resign If Deadline is Not Met for Abuja Airport Reopening

House c’ttee unimpresse­d with level of work at airport FG debunks reports on extension of work to 18 weeks

- Chinedu Eze in Lagos, James Emejo and Kasim Sumaina in Abuja

The Minister of State for Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirik, a has said he will resign his appointmen­t if the federal government fails to meet the six-weeks deadline for the rehabilita­tion of the runway of the Nnamdi Azikiwe Internatio­nal Airport, Abuja.

The minister made this known yesterday during a meeting with Aviation Round Table (ART) in Lagos.

Sirika said the level of work done in the first three weeks since the runway was closed on March 8, 2017, has shown that the work would be completed at the given date (April 19, 2017).

He explained that the Kaduna airport was chosen as alternativ­e to Abuja airport because the other airports around Abuja, including the airports in Minna, Jos, and Makurdi do not provide adequate security and safety messures but it was Kaduna airport that has dual carriagewa­y to Abuja, which road could easily be rehabilita­ted within the period the airport in Abuja would be closed.

He also noted that while the Minna airport is closer to Abuja, the road is a single lane, filled with potholes and along undulating topography and hills, adding that it is insecure, unsafe compared to Kaduna.

Besides, he said while there was immediate plan to rehabilita­te the Kaduna-Abuja road, there was no plan to rebuild the Minna-Abuja road.

The minister added that he knew that the Abuja airport runway was bad even before he became the minister, noting that closing down the airport became inevitable when there was no other alternativ­e to do a thorough, efficient rehabilita­tion.

“I knew the runway was bad before I became the minister. It was shown to me when I was a senator. It was a similar experience with Port Harcourt airport runway. The runway became so bad that it caved in. The airport was closed for two years. We cannot afford to close the Abuja airport for two year; that is why it became expedient that we do the job now. We are going to meet the deadline. Whatever work that would be done is going to be done without closing down the runway,” he said.

The minister also said that the runway was shut down at the time it was done because the Nigerian Meteorolog­ical Agency (NIMET) gave the projection of rainfall for the year “and we have to do the work before the rains set in.”

In his introducto­ry speech, the Minister of Informatio­n, Lai Mohammed, said the meeting, which was organised at his instance, was aimed at correcting the false informatio­n making the rounds that the deadline for the completion of the runway rehabilita­tion had been extended.

He regretted that since 30 years the runway was built, no major work was done on it, except patchworks; that was why it degenerate­d so badly and needed the closure of the airport to ensure it was fully rehabilita­ted.

In his opening speech, the President of ART, Gbenga Olowo, said the nation’s aviation industry has not advanced in the last 40 years

He regretted that while internatio­nal airlines are generating huge revenues from their Nigerian operations, Nigerian airlines have only eight per cent of the market, which has started dwindling now that many Nigerian airlines are dwindling.

“In 2000, there were 12,000 weekly seats on the Nigerian routes; it became 30,000 in 2012. In 2015, the number of seats increased to 48,000, but Nigerian airlines are only contributi­ng eight per cent to this market. But they are losing that small segment of the market because they are now lying prostrate with what is happening to Arik Air,” Olowo said.

Meanwhile, the Chairman, House Committee on Aviation, Hon. Onyejeocha Nkeiruka, yesterday expressed frustratio­n at the level of work so far carried out on the runway of the Nnamdi Azikwe Internatio­nal Airport Abuja, three weeks into its closure to allow for rehabilita­tion work on the runway.

The committee’s concerns came despite claims by the project managers that 40 per cent work had been carried out so far.

Neverthele­ss, the chairman, who led members of the committee on an oversight function to the airport, said it was concerned that the work may not be completed by the scheduled six weeks.

Nkeiruka further expressed worry that though the agreement signed with the contractor­s was for total reconstruc­tion of the runway, they appeared to be carrying out a mere resurfacin­g work.

It was also noticed that work had not started on the taxiway.

The legislator told journalist­s shortly after the inspection that there’s still a lot do be done.

She said: “I have my concerns from what I have seen because the work is divided into three phases and they’re on the first phase and from a layman’s angle, which I am, I’m saying that I have concern that the work will not be completed but they keep saying it will be completed.

“What we’ve seen is the civil aspect but we are concerned about the mechanical, particular­ly around the lightening of the runway.”

On the alleged resurfacin­g work instead of total rehabilita­tion, she said: “That’s the point: they said it’s a total resurfacin­g but when we come to the board, they’ve to explain to us the level of implementa­tion to what they signed. Of course, we’ve the papers to what agreement they signed.”

Nkeiruka added:”We have concerns from what we’ve seen on the ground. We’ve the issue of whether it’s total reconstruc­tion or resurfacin­g. But those things will be explained through the books. They said they’ll start the lightening of the runway by Wednesday.”

On concerns over a possible extension of the closure timeline, the committee chairman said:”That’s why we’ve come so that they will know Nigerians are concerned. We wouldn’t want any extension and we want them to give us a perfect job on the agreement we’ve made.”

Meanwhile, the Site Engineer, Yemi Ayelesun, said:”We’re working on both the runway and taxiway. We closed the runway on February 8 and use that day to remove all electrical materials on site and work started on February 9. Now, the whole milling is completed while asphalt work has started. We’ve gone beyond 40 percent in terms of the overall work. “

He also promised that the efforts were being made to complete the entire work before the scheduled date.

However, the federal government yesterday debunked media reports that it had extended the rehabilita­tion work on the Abuja airport runway to 18 weeks, even as it reassured air travellers that the work would not exceed the original six weeks plan.

The assurance was coming against a backdrop of reports on some media, not THISDAY, that the federal government has extended works at the airport to 18 weeks.

It noted that though it was aware of the hardship currently being faced by air travellers, adding that if did not shut down the airport for repairs, it would have one way or the other, shut down itself.

The Deputy Director, Press/ Public Affairs, Ministry of Transporta­tion (Aviation), Mr. James A. Odaudu, informed THISDAY that the report did not emanate from the ministry and at no point did the federal government disclosed such informatio­n.

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