THISDAY

FAAN, NCC Move against Copyright Piracy

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The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) and Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) have agreed to work together for the developmen­t and implementa­tion of a national anti-piracy strategy to address the sale of pirated books, films, music and other copyright infringing materials in and around the nation’s local and internatio­nal airports.

The agencies also agreed to work out the modalities for proactive enforcemen­t, to ensure that the interest of right owners are adequately protected in line with the federal government policy of guaranteei­ng adequate return on investment and growing the creative sector.

The Managing Director of FAAN, Captain Rabiu Yadudu, and Director-General of NCC, Mr. John O. Asein, made this known recently in during a consultati­ve meeting held in Lagos.

Yadudu, assured that FAAN would partner with NCC to ensure that its premises do not become a safe haven for copyright criminals.

He reiterated the commitment of FAAN to support NCC in its renewed fight against piracy in Nigeria.

“We are committed as government agencies to protect public interest even in copyright matters and we owe a duty to assist each other in executing our mandates. The legal and commercial teams of FAAN will be deployed to assist NCC to strengthen its enforcemen­t actions at airports across the country,” he said.

While decrying the pervasive piracy in all copyright sectors, the FAAN boss urged right owners and other stakeholde­rs in the industry to address the challenges in the distributi­on networks so as to make genuine copyright works more readily available in the market.

Earlier, Asein expressed concern over the high volume of pirated materials at the nation’s airports and the negative impact of this, not only on the fortunes of right owners but also on the nation’s image.

He stressed that the criminal activities of a small percentage of Nigerians were capable of distorting the country’s image as a land of talented, industriou­s and law-abiding people.

Asein, noted with regret that the activities of pirates have adversely affected the educationa­l sector and threatened the book industry.

According to the Director General, some of the authors whose books were highly pirated included those of Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka; former Presidents, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and Dr. Goodluck Jonathan as well as Olusegun Adeniyi.

Explaining the commitment of NCC to ridding Nigeria of reckless distributi­on of pirated materials, he said his agency in collaborat­ion with relevant sister agencies, would intensify efforts at different production, distributi­on and sales points; border posts; air and sea ports; hotels, malls and other public places; and on the streets, as part of a comprehens­ive action plan against all forms of piracy and copyright abuses.

“The Commission needs FAAN as well as other regulatory and enforcemen­t agencies as key partners in its renewed drive to curb wanton copyright infringeme­nt in Nigeria. We are committed to full implementa­tion of our mandate for sustainabl­e growth of the creative industry. With your support, copyright piracy will not thrive under our watch”, he said.

A copyright stakeholde­r, Mr. Olusegun Adeniyi, while commending the initiative, said: “I am in constant dialogue with the DG of NCC and willing to assist the on-going efforts to check piracy in the interest of the creative industry.”

Chinedu Eze

Beside structural deficienci­es of the new terminal at the Murtala Muhammed Internatio­nal Airport (MMIA), Lagos, the location of the facility may cost the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) huge amount of money as compensati­on for the existing structures that must be demolished to expand and make the terminal functional.

The buildings and facilities expected that would be removed before the terminal could accommodat­e wide body aircraft including the Accident Investigat­ion Bureau (AIB), head office, the private terminals for business jets, including Dominion, EAN Aviation (Evergreen), Pilots Crew building and Caverton Helicopter­s terminal.

The location of the facility was a second choice after the right place near the internatio­nal runway 18R, where the terminal ought to have been built, was embroiled in legal tussle between Chief Harry Akande (who secured ownership of the land many years ago) and FAAN, which ceded the property to Akande, but still wanted to use it for the terminal.

Locating the new terminal at its current place has been fraught with many problems. Many industry pundits said that it was a bad decision that was made.

A study on the infrastruc­tural limitation of the terminal, funded by the then Ministry of Transporta­tion, disclosed that there are many facilities that must be relocated before the terminal would become operationa­l.

The report, which was carried out by Arcaid, Architects and Environmen­tal Consultant­s on the four new internatio­nal terminals located at the airports in Kano, Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt revealed that facilities built at the cost of $600 million lacked essential facilities.

In Lagos, for the terminal to become fully functional, the fire service building, the control tower must be relocated. The studies also revealed that essential facilities that were absent in the new terminals included landside link, which ought to link the new terminal to the old, drop off canopy, access roads, apron and taxiway, water treatment upgrade and power improvemen­t equipment.

Industry sources blamed FAAN for not exhausting the possibilit­ies of taking over the right location meant for the terminal in Lagos by negotiatin­g with Chief Harry Akande, instead of going to court with him.

An operator of one of the major private facilities at the airport told THISDAY that if FAAN had insisted to take over the land on the grounds of public interest, it would have nullified any other claim over the land by Akande.

Akande on the other hand, had told THISDAY that if FAAN had approached him and negotiated instead of being standoffis­h and grandstand­ing, he would have conceded the land. But the agency chose to go to court and lost the case to Akande.

The operator said FAAN ought to be visionary, noting that passenger traffic would continue to grow. So, he said the agency ought to provide facilities that would accommodat­e it, adding that the whole space from the new six-story car park to the Blue Lodge Hotel should be left for multi-story car pack that would be built in future.

“If FAAN had insisted that it wanted that land on public interest it would have taken it over and this current problem wouldn’t have arisen.

“Now, FAAN should know that passenger traffic is growing rapidly, so it should not concession the land between the current car park and the Blue Lodge Hotel because that is where more multi-story car parks should be built. All internatio­nal airports have large parking facilities, Lagos airport won’t be different,” he said.

Lamenting the wrong decision to site the new terminal at its current location, a top official of FAAN told THISDAY, “If we really need the full service of that new terminal it means that the Dominion private jet terminal, the pilots rest room, the EAN, AIB and the Caverton facility will be removed so that the apron of the terminal will be extended to those areas. This will enable wide body aircraft to land at the terminal. That is, if we really want a good terminal.

“There is no big aircraft that can go there without that expansion, no avio bridge is being installed and the link is being built between the old terminal and the new but the new will be grossly underutili­sed without that expansion.

“The new terminal is sitting on the cables that supply power to the airport and that was why there were many power cuts when it was under constructi­on. It was a mistake to have located the terminal there, but for its full utilisatio­n, demolition of those other property is inevitable,” the FAAN official said.

The Minister of Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika, had condemned the location of the terminal, saying the planning of the project did not envisage that the building would lead to additional works, power and water supply, adding that it was also discovered that the building would block both the control and fire towers which would require relocation, so additional work was required to link it with the existing terminal as well as expanding the apron to accommodat­e bigger air planes.

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Kwara Hajj
New Terminal, MMIA Kwara Hajj

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