A Nigerian pilot, Captain Benson Ikponwosa, has warned that
there may be more disasters in Nigeria’s air space if the airport
authority continues to over tax and over charge the local airlines in
its quest to make more money.
Reacting to the recent
plane crash in Lagos state, Mr Ikponwosa said the issue is beyond
regulation as “we have never been better regulated than we are now and
yet these things are happening… I think it’s gone beyond regulations.”
He averred that a lot more attention is paid to paper work than the safety of flights.
As
a result of high taxes and charges, airlines are being forced to cut
corners leading to late payment of salaries to airline staff.
The airlines in Nigeria are the most tasked and most taxed, he said.
“Sometimes
to issue a piece of paper like C of A (certificate of airworthiness),
some airlines pay
$10,000, for a piece of paper for Christ’s sake.”
Ikponwosa added that “when you pay so much money for so many things that
you have to have, what happens? You’re pushing airlines to start
cutting corners. The airlines are unable to pay their staff salaries”.
He
warned that aviation staff who have not been paid salaries for months
would serve as easy accomplices to terrorists in the country.
Mr
Ikponwosa who landed his first plane, professionally, in Nairobi, Kenya
as a co-pilot 1987, revealed that parking fee for the airplane to stay
overnight was $60, “at that time, parking fee for that airplane in
Nigeria was $200 an hour” and $4,800 dollars for it to stay overnight.
In
2013, the figure has not changed in Kenya, which is why the Nairobi
international airport is abuzz all day and all night. “At night, Nairobi
is a beehive of activities because that is when all the cargo airplanes
come in to carry produce to Europe”.
However, the same cannot be said of the international airports in Lagos and Abuja.
The
plans to make the Murtala Muhammed International Airport into a hub
will not materialize if you are not ‘operator friendly,’ he said.
He
disclosed that the airport authorities deliberately chose to use
airport price rates obtainable in airports such as Heathrow, Gatwick,
Hong Kong etc. “They have forgotten that you can never take Nigeria and
be equating Nigeria with those countries”.
In Ghana, an aircraft is charged $480 per day.
“You
have to make the aviation user-friendly and not kill the airlines, he
said, adding that domestic airlines in Nigeria are being strangulated as
a result of too many charges which are exorbitant.
He called on the regulatory bodies “to look inwards to find out why are these charges overwhelm airlines.”
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