Aviation
Passengers Raise Alarm Over Poor Security
The porous nature of the Port Harcourt International Airport, Omagwa, is threatening the security of passengers and their laugage, users and staff of the airport and this calls for an urgent attention.
The Tide check revealed that cars parked at the airport are no longer safe. Car snatchers now apply a system of melting the padlocks used in locking cars at the airport with the use of chemicals.
It was learnt that within the past six weeks, a staff of Aero Contractors Airlines lost her Golf 3 car to thieves.
The car was packed at the premises of the airport. Few weeks after, attempts were made to steal two cars belonging to passengers who traveled, but for the security alarm gargets fitted into the cars.
The Tide understood that the sum of N1,000 is usually paid to the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) for a car parked overnight, but a source told The Tide that there is no security patrol at night and that the satellite camera there does not cover all parts of the airport to make the detection of any crime possible.
There is also poor lightening system at the airport such that most part of it are dark at night, thereby giving room for anything to happen.
The perimeter fencing at the airport, which was started more than a year ago has not been completed while its access control system is not effective, just as the police check-point is noted for exorting money from motorists.
FAAN security personnel, The Tide learnt, does not have good relationship with other security agents at the airport, which sometimes results to friction. FAAN generates a lot of revenue but one wonders why there is a lot of infrastructural decay at the Port Harcourt International Airport. There is need for an internal perimeter fencing that should stop around the NAMA area of the airport with a gate to check movement of vehicles and humans from the Ipo village axis.
The management of the airport needs to sit up and map out new and more effective security measures to rid the airport of criminal activities. A situation where people are allowed to cluster the entrances of the departure and arrival halls is not palatable because such persons are not screened.
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Aviation Professionals Want Agencies Boards’ Inauguration
As a measure to curb corruption and restore accountability, the Association of Nigeria Aviation Professionals (ANAP), has called on the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, to push for the urgent formation and inauguration of governing boards for all other aviation agencies.
ANAP’s Secretary General, AbdulRasaq Saidu, made this call at the weekend when interacting with aviation correspondents, in reaction to recent inauguration of Board of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN).
Keyamo had recently inaugurated the FAAN board, more than six months after its members were appointed by President Bola Tinubu, where Dr. Umar Ganduje was named Board Chairman, with FAAN’s Managing Director, Olubunmi Kuku, as the Vice Chairman.
Other board members include representatives from the Ministries of Justice, Defence, Tourism, and Aviation, as well as professionals from the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology, and FAAN’s legal department.
The ANAP scribe there urged the aviation Minister not to stop at FAAN but to ensure that all aviation parastatals are given functional boards to restore order and credibility to the sector.
He, however, commended Keyamo for recently inaugurating the board of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria but stressed that more needed to be done.
Saidu also warned that the continued delay in constituting boards for other aviation agencies creates room for unchecked abuses, including illegal contracts, fraudulent employment practices, and mismanagement.
“The absence of governing boards violates the enabling Acts that established these agencies. Only properly constituted boards can enforce discipline, ensure due process in decision-making, and provide oversight to prevent corruption”, Saidu said.
He emphasised that the aviation unions, including ANAP, have consistently raised concerns about poor governance and lack of transparency within the aviation system.
He called on President Bola Tinubu to act swiftly by appointing board members for all relevant agencies, in the interest of fairness and aviation safety.
Saidu also tackled the former Minister of Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika, for failing to inaugurate any boards during his eight-year tenure, despite appointments being made by former President Muhammadu Buhari.
“ANAP raised the alarm several times under Sirika’s leadership, but nothing changed. That lapse has continued under the current administration, and it must be addressed now”, Saidu stated.
By: Corlins Walter
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