THISDAY

Hadi Sirika’s Pipe Dream

- Lagos: Abuja: TELEPHONE Lagos:

The Minister of Aviation, Mr. Hadi Sirika continues to dwell in an alternativ­e universe. He insists on harbouring a pipe dream for a national carrier that the government of Nigeria can ill-afford. He jumped into the fray last week when he responded to a suggestion by the chief executive of the Asset Management Corporatio­n of Nigeria (AMCON), Ahmed Kuru that the federal government should make the debt-ridden Arik Air the national carrier. But in a swift response, Sirika dismissed the advisory, saying the airline was not fit for purpose and was privately owned.

Sirika is dead wrong and would do well by accepting the suggestion made by Kuru. To buttress my point, let me regurgitat­e from my article a year ago titled Requiem for Nigeria Air: “Arik Air,

Aero Contractor­s and the remnants of the defunct Air Nigeria (successor of Virgin Nigeria), following their takeover by AMCON, currently belong to the Nigerian government. With the still operationa­l Arik and Aero Contractor­s under its control, AMCON, with the assistance of reputable internatio­nal consultant­s and the Ministry of Aviation, should begin the process of underwriti­ng the liabilitie­s of both airlines, hiving off and disposing of their non-core assets, and merging the airlines into one entity.

“After the corporate restructur­ing process, which must include a share restructur­ing strategy that leaves the owners of the legacy airlines with some minority stake in the emerging entity, the new airline should be offered for sale to core strategic investors capable of injecting fresh capital into it and expanding its fleet and operations. This avenue is a surer way of getting an airline with a Nigerian identity off the ground.

“Sirika must bury his ill-fated attempt to start an airline from scratch. The Nigerian government does not need a 5% stake in any airline, nor does it need to provide a take off grant of $300m. The government can barely fund the constructi­on of roads in the country, nor can it adequately fund the education and health sectors, much less provide funding for an airline.

“If the aviation ministry has the resources to spare, they should be deployed in improving airport infrastruc­ture and the concession of Nigeria’s viable airports to the private sector. The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has proven to be a basket case. Like the phantom Nigeria Air, it needs to be buried and confined to the dustbins of history.”

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