THISDAY

Yuletide: Flight Cancellati­ons, Delays, Frustrate Travellers

- Chinedu Eze

The Christmas holiday has turned gloomy for many air travellers in Nigeria who wish to travel from their place of work to their communitie­s to celebrate with their families. This is because at the end of every year flights to many destinatio­ns in Nigeria are cancelled due to Harmattan haze.

During this period many airports have visibility below acceptable minimal, which in some airports is 800 meters. Passengers are made to spend many hours beyond their flight time waiting for a possible favourable weather report that would enable the airlines operate their flights.

Since December 24 airlines have been finding it extremely difficult to operate to such airports located in Port Harcourt, Enugu, Benin, Asaba, Warri, Akure and others and passengers were left stranded at the airports.

THISDAY learnt from the airlines that they do not out rightly cancel flights until report from the Nigeria Meteorolog­ical Agency (NIMET) confirm that there would not be acceptable visibility for the day, adding that sometimes while the passengers wait they may get favourable weather report and the flights could operate.

According to the Executive Chairman of Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON), Captain Nogie Meggison, the solution to the weather challenges, including Harmattan haze is the installati­on of Category 3 Instrument Landing System (ILS) at the airports.

This category of ILS allows aircraft to land at zero visibility at the airport. There have been efforts to install the equipment at major airports in the country, according to the Managing Director of the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), Captain Fola Akinkuotu.

Currently the Kaduna Internatio­nal Airport has Category 3 ILS and there are plans to install same in Lagos and Abuja, which have high category of the equipment.

Nigeria’s major carrier, Medview Airline has previously apologised to its passengers because of flight delays caused by unfavourab­le weather.

“We share your pains for our inability at the material time to fly you to your destinatio­ns at the appointed time,” the airline told the passengers.

The airline said the safety of passengers and crew come first before any other considerat­ions, and in such situations, delays and rescheduli­ng become inevitable.

“We have put the necessary logistics in place to meet our obligation­s to our esteemed passengers who have over the years kept faith with us,” the airline said.

Also spokesman of Air Peace, which controls over 45 per cent of domestic passenger traffic, Chris Iwarah, told THISDAY that bad weather, which leads to poor visibility, is responsibl­e for most of the delays and sometimes flight cancellati­on.

He added that flight delays are also caused by limited facilities at some airports.

For example, at the General Aviation Terminal (GAT) of the Murtala Muhammed Internatio­nal Airport, Lagos, both Arik Air and Air Peace are using only one passenger processing gate each and also using one x-ray machine for each gate. This means that no airline can process two or more flights at the same time. One flight must be processed before

another and this causes delays.

THISDAY also learnt that fares to Eastern, South West and South South part of the country are higher than other destinatio­ns because these areas are recording upsurge in passenger movement.

“Travellers should also know that airport facilities are completely overstretc­hed. Government may be doing its best but these facilities are overstretc­hed due to passenger upsurge. We used to notice these limitation­s in the past but high passenger movement has made it very obvious and this contribute­s to flight delays,” Iwarah said.

Spokesman of Dana Air, Kingsley Ezenwa told THISDAY that many of the airline’s flights have not been disrupted by weather, saying the airline has experience­d slight delay in some of its flights.

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