Aviation
Airport Explosion Kills 35, Injures 152
No fewer than 35 persons were killed and 152 wounded when an explosion ripped through international arrivals hall at Moscow’s busiest airport on Monday, said officials.
The mid-afternoon explosion described as terror attack by Russian President occurred at Domodedovo Airport. It may have been caused by a suicide bomber.
President Omitry Medvedev told officials in a televised briefing that “from the preliminary information we have, it was a terror attack and ordered authorities to beef up security at Moscow’s two other commercial airports and other key transport facilities, including the sub-way system, the target of past terror attacks.
Medvedev stated that the explosion demonstrated that security regulations had been breached.
As a result of the incident, the president postponed his planned departure for the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland scheduled for Tuesday, where he was to give the opening address the next day.
Although there have been repeated attacks on the Moscow subway and on Russian trains, most blamed on Chechen militants.
The Monday bombing was the first involving a Russian airport since 2004.
Sergel Lavochkin, who was waiting in the arrivals hall for a friend to arrive from Cuba, said he saw emergency teams carrying blood-led people out of the terminal.
“I heard a loud bang, saw plastic panels falling down from the ceiling and heard people screaming. Then people started running away,” Lavochkin told Rossiya 24 television.
A British Airways passenger, Mark Green, who had arrived at the airport, told BBC television that he heard the huge explosion as he left the terminal.
“Literally, it shook you,” he said, adding “as we were putting the bags in the car a lot of alarm were going off and people started flowing out of the terminal, some of whom were covered in blood.”
According to him, one gentleman had a pair of jeans on that was ripped and his thigh from his groin to his knee was covered in blood.
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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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