THISDAY

ICAO to Assist AIB on Flight Safety Lab

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Chinedu Eze

A combined team of officials from the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO) and Singapore has arrived in Nigeria to assist the Accident Investigat­ion Bureau (AIB) to evaluate its Flight Safety Laboratory aimed at preventing air crashes and help in accident investigat­ion.

This was disclosed in Lagos by the Commission­er of AIB, Akin Olateru, who said the team was led by Mr. Caj Frostel from ICAO, and that one of the team’s objectives was to ensure that the facility meets internatio­nal standards.

Speaking with journalist­s at the bureau’s headquarte­rs at the Murtala Muhammed Airport (MMA), Lagos, at the weekend, Olateru said he was happy about the team’s visit and explained that it was such projects like the safety laboratory that made it imperative that the organisati­on needed more funding and hence the quest for five per cent of passenger service charge (PSC), which has been approved by the Minister of State for Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika, from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN).

He noted that the laboratory was cost intensive like other projects aimed at pre-empting and preventing accidents and frowned at the criticism that trailed the approval of five per cent of the PSC to the agency by the ministry from a section of the industry, saying several AIB projects were stalled because of paucity of funds.

Olateru said the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) in accordance with the Civil Aviation Act 2006 gets 58 per cent; the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) earns 23 per cent; Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT) gets seven per cent while the Nigerian Meteorolog­ical Agency (NIMET) earns nine per cent of the total sum.

He explained further that among the agencies in the sector, only FAAN earned the PSC 100 per cent, adding that the same agency still collects charges for adverts, parking and landing of aircraft, land and tolls on vehicles coming in and exiting the airports across the country.

The commission­er remarked that paucity of funds had stalled the release of the over 35 accident investigat­ion reports, due to nontrainin­g of accident investigat­ors since 2013, stressing that the agency needed to develop human capacities in order to compete with others.

“Anybody that says it is not fair for us to get a part of the PSC is wicked because who owns the two agencies? It’s the federal government. We all share the TSC, and FAAN doesn’t share its PSC with anybody and the government in its wisdom says ‘FAAN, please give AIB five per cent.’ I don’t think that is too much. It is within the power of the Minister to do that.

“But, one thing that is critical to us is that we have to work on our budget on the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) which is the issue of accident investigat­ion and training.”

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