THISDAY

Arik Chairman Calls for Forensic Audit of Aviation Ministry

- Chinedu Eze

Arik Air Chairman, Joseph Arumemi-Ikhide, yesterday said the malaise plaguing the aviation sector would not allow the sector to develop, and therefore urged the federal government to carry out forensic audit on the industry in order to cure the ills plaguing it.

Arumemi-Ikhide called on President Muhammadu Buhari to carry out a forensic audit of the ministry to look into the dubious and corrupt practices perpetuate­d at different stages in the sector by putting numerous hurdles before Nigerian airlines that indicated interest to operate internatio­nal destinatio­ns while at the same time frequencie­s were given to foreign carriers to operate freely into Nigerian airports.

He spoke at a breakfast meeting of the Aviation Round Table (ART) in Lagos where he also debunked insinuatio­ns that Nigeria airlines do not have the financial muscles to carry out transatlan­tic operations into Asia, Europe and America.

The Arik Air chairman, who was making a rare appearance at an industry forum, alleged that officials of the Ministry of Aviation should be held liable for the rot that has characteri­zed the Bilateral Air Services Agreements (BASA) between Nigeria and other countries.

According to him, past ministers in the ministry were ill-advised by officials who rather prefer to gain from the lopsided arrangemen­t they entered into rather than protect Nigeria carriers, remarking that at various times the airlines had been denied entry into countries it applied to fly into while they grant entry permission­s into Nigeria to airlines from countries that refused same to Nigeria airlines.

He also said the recent publicatio­n in national newspapers of the name of debtor airlines by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) was a disservice to local airlines and called for its reversal.

Arumemi-Ikhide added that the airline was not afraid of government setting up a national carrier and also denied allegation­s that Arik Air owed Nigerian banks any debt. He also revealed that Arik Air has secured $1 billion loan to upgrade its operation and had also concluded arrangemen­t to acquire 26 new aircraft between now and May 2017.

The Arik boss accused the presidency of poaching four pilots the airline spend millions to train and are now in the presidenti­al fleet and disclosed that the airline would soon be quoted on the Nigeria Stock Exchange (NSE).

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