Airline operators in Nigeria yearns for better navigation
aids around the airports in the country as the experience of their members for
some time has not been too good. This is due to the weather phenomenon around
the country at this time of the year.
Expressing their displeasure, the Chairman of the airline
association Captain Nogie Meggison said, “Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON)
hereby expresses its gross disappointment and deepest displeasure at the
deplorable state of Navigational Aids at airports around the country which
makes flying in the Nigerian airspace virtually impossible during the harmattan
season thereby increasing the sufferings of passengers and disrupting their
plans for the yuletide season due to flight cancellations.
Meggison decried the situation and described it as
appalling. He noted that exactly forty eight years today on December 28, 1968,
the first aircraft operated at CAT lll and landed in zero (0) visibility at
Heathrow airport, yet Nigeria is unable to land aircraft with visibility of
about 800m.
“Most international and local flights had to be diverted
to Cotonou , which is rather
unfortunate. The issue of the harmattan haze is a yearly seasonal occurrence as
Nigeria has mainly Raining (Thunderstorms) and Dry Seasons (Harmattan)"-Meggison
complained. “If the world has been
landing in zero or virtually no visibility since December 28, 1968, today 48
years later on December 28, 2016 on the anniversary of the first CAT III
landing at Heathrow airport,Nigeria still can't land with 800meters of
visibility? Why are the Navigation aids not working or upgraded over the years?
Why is there no solution to this issue after forty years of the airlines crying
out? "It is rather shameful that
today in the 21st Century, we are still talking of operating at CAT l and
unable to land at 800m at our airports," he noted.”
Giving the experience of airlines in the recent times,
Meggison said, “For the past three (3) days MMA in Lagos was shut down until
6pm before flights could land. Hence no airline could fly and passengers were
delayed with colossal loss of revenue to the operators. A DANA Air flight that
departed Abuja at 10am could not land in Lagos and had to return to Abuja until
6pm before flying back again still leaving about 500 to 600 passengers to
various destinations stranded at the airport.”
"This is very unfair to operators who cannot charge
passengers for the extra cost the airline has to bear on return or cancelled
flights and we have to feed and lodge them in a hotel. NAMA and FAAN need to be
more responsible to ensure that our airports are equipped with the right
landing aids to allow 24hours operations in any weather condition,"
Meggison stressed.
Listing other challenges, he said AON has been calling attention of government to this
situation for a long time now. The economic impact is too heavy on us. Fifty
per cent(50%) of scheduled flights are delayed due to weather, shortage of Jet
fuel, inadequate screening machines at the Terminal Boarding exit points,
insufficient parking for airplanes on the tarmac, as well as VIP movement etc.
“How then can we make money to pay the high taxes and
levies being imposed by the agencies and parastatals or contribute our quota to
the National GDP this way?”-Meggison asked
“It is also instructive to note that the overstaffed
Agencies have over 18,000 staff servicing 3000 airline staff. FAAN alone has
about 11,000 staff and NAMA has 4000 staff with only 250 Air Traffic
Controllers. According to the Minister of State for Aviation, a particular
Agency has about forty eight (48) General Managers. The huge funds made from
passengers 5% taxes on Ticket Sales Charge (TSC); Passenger Service Charge
(PSC), Over Flight Charges, Enroute Navigational Charges and Terminal Charge,
landing fee and parking charges are being used wrongly to pay for salaries and
the lavish lifestyle of the over bloated workforce at the expense of improving
the navigation and airport infrastructure.
“It is sad to note that Murtala Muhammed Airport which is
the nation's biggest and busiest airport is a CAT l airport. This means flights
cannot land at below 800m due to the obsolete Instrument Landing System (ILS)
in place at the airport. Yet all the aircraft being operated by the airlines
are fully equipped to do a CAT ll or even CAT lll landing. If our airports were
CAT lll as in Heathrow airport this same day on December 28, 1968, flights
would have been able to operate normally in this harmattan season.
“What we need is simple solutions. Get better equipment.
If we had CAT lll equipment at our airports the airlines will fly. The relevant
Agencies need to invest in modern Navigation aids and Runway lights so that we
don't have to come back again next year complaining about the same thing as we
have done for so many decades. Also, the planned concession of airports might
be a way forward provided it is transparent and with a clear agenda as the
Concessionaire would make sure these landing aids are in place," Meggison
said.
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