Business a.m.

Praises for Dana Air on 14th anniversar­y from Bi-Courtney, NAAPE

- Sade Williams/ Business a.m.

HADI SIRIKA, THE AVIATION MINIS TER, HAD BEAT HIS CHEST LAST WEEK THAT NO LAW IN Nigeria could stop the new national carrier, Nigeria Air, from taking to the air. But that was only short lived as it only took a Federal High court sitting in Lagos to grant an interim injunction restrainin­g the ministry from going ahead with the execution of the proposed carrier, after domestic operators in the country sought the court’s interventi­on over the new airline.

Sirika had said at a stakeholde­rs appreciati­on forum in Lagos for the reconstruc­tion of Lagos airport runway 18L, that the federal government was going ahead with establishi­ng a national carrier despite the subsisting suit challengin­g the project.

He insisted that aviation stakeholde­rs and unions had sufficient time to participat­e in the process and cannot stall the project with legal suits. He said he does not see the possibilit­y that any court of competent jurisdicti­on will erect a roadblock to the emergence of the national carrier.

The minister said he personally and individual­ly engaged indigenous carriers to participat­e in the project, including Air Peace, Azman Air and Max Air, but they turned down the invitation because it was not formal.

“I have been very transparen­t in the processes put in place to deliver the national carrier. If anyone wants to invest in a company, no one can them from investing. You can own a company 100 percent. If anyone wants to invest, why not? We want foreign direct investment,” the minister said.

He described as totally unacceptab­le and unfair for stakeholde­rs to claim that they have not been carried along on the national carrier project, adding that anybody who is parading such informatio­n is workstop ing contrary to the actualisat­ion of the aviation road map.

“Every informatio­n or documents pertaining to the project is domiciled at the ministry of aviation and Infrastruc­ture Constructi­on Regulatory Commission which are driving processes leading to the national carrier,” Sirika had explained.

However, this did not deter some airline operators from making good their threat to halt the establishm­ent of the airline.

After hearing the submission of their Nureini Jimoh, a senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), the court on careful considerat­ion of the applicatio­n and submission of counsel ordered an injunction, restrainin­g the defendants, either by themselves, agents, privies, principals, or any other persons whosoever from executing the proposed, or draft national carrier establishm­ent and an agreement by the Federal Government of Nigeria.

Azman Airlines, Air Peace, Max Air, United Nigeria Airlines and Top Brass Aviation, the plaintiffs, sort from the Federal High Court, Lagos, a perpetual injunction to restrain the defendants (Nigeria Air, Ethiopian Airlines, Aviation Minister, Hadi Sirika, Attorney General of the Federation), their agents, servants, officers, privies, and principals from perfecting, continuing and transfer

PRAISES FOR ITS CON SISTENCY AND RESIL IENCE HAVE CONTIN UED TO BE SENT TO DANA AIR following its resumption of flight operations following a regulatory audit and its celebratio­n of 14 years of flight business in the country on November 9, 2022.

The National Associatio­n of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers ( NAAPE) in a letter signed by Umoh Ofonime, its deputy general secretary said: “We write to congratula­te your company on your success at the recently concluded NCAA audit. We are sure the exercise has prepared your airline for smooth and safe operations.”

Similarly, operators of MMA2, Bi-Courtney Aviation Services Ltd, during a congratula­tory visit to Dana Air’s operationa­l office at MMA2 led by Remi Jibodu, its head, aeronautic­al & cargo, said, “We are super- excited that one of our oldest airlines at this terminal is back in the air after a successful audit by the regulator.

“We are here to congratula­te you also on your 14th anniversar­y celebratio­ns and we believe your restart of operation will change the market dynamics.”

The chief operating officer of ring the operations of Nigeria Air by the 3rd and 4th Defendants to the 2nd Defendant.

They declared in the suit that the action, conduct, and or decisions in the sale of the shares and operations of the 1st Defendant (Nigeria Air) is in violation of the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) 2020, SEC Nigeria Consolidat­ed Rules & Regulation­s 2013 (as amended in 2022), Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC) Act, Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on (ICAO) Convention, Civil Aviation Act, Public Procuremen­t Act, Concession Regulatory Commission (Est.) Act, 2005, Federal Competitio­n and Consumer Protection Act, Procuremen­t Processes for Public Private Partnershi­p in the Federal Government under the National Policy on Public Private Partnershi­p (N4P) and Nigeria Civil Aviation Regulation­s, 2015, and other regulatory statutes on aviation, companies, and investment laws in Nigeria.

They also declared that the entire administra­tive actions and decisions of the 3rd (Sirika) and 4th Defendants (Attorney General of the Federation) in the sale of the shares of the 1st Defendant to the 2nd Defendant and its consortium is invalid, void, and of no effect.

They equally declared that the 2nd Defendant (Ethiopian Airlines) was incompeten­t to bid for shares in the 1st Defendant and commence business accordingl­y.

The plaintiff prayed the court to set aside the entire bidding/selection process(es) for the “Nigeria Air” project as well as the approval, grant, or selection of the 2nd defendant by the 1st, 3rd, and 4th Defendants in the process.

Other prayers are for the immediate, fresh, and transparen­t bidding process(es) involving the plaintiffs being the indigenous Airline Operators in Nigeria rightly entitled to participat­e in the process, an order directing the immediate revocation and cancellati­on of the Air Transport License (ATL) issued by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to the 1st Defendant.

Dana Air, Ememobong Ettete, while appreciati­ng the team from MMA2 during the visit, assured the airline’s guests that Dana Air has indeed changed the market dynamics and will continue to offer safe, reliable and trail-blazing services to the flying public.

Commenting further, Emem said, “our on time performanc­e is top notch, we are offering gifts to our loyal guests on board to celebrate them for believing in us and there is still more to be announced soon,” he added.

Having flown over nine million passengers in 14 years of its commercial operations in Nigeria, Dana Air is one of Nigeria’s leading airlines with a varied fleet of 9 aircraft and daily flights from Lagos to Abuja, Port harcourt, Enugu, and Owerri.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria