Business
Associated Airline Crash Survivor Demands Compensation
One of the cabin crew members who survived the crash of Associated Airlines which occurred at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos on October 3 2013, Mrs Oluwatoyin Samson, has alleged she was denied compensation by the airline.
In a statement made available to journalists at the 2nd Engineer Zakariya Haruna Memorial Lecture held in Lagos recently, Mrs Samson, said when she heard the airline had started paying 30 per cent insurance to the families of the deceased, she decided to call the spokesman of the airline Mr Alex Emode and asked him about her own settlement.
She said Emode asked her to go and get a lawyer but when she got a lawyer and went to the Association office, the management of the airline said she was not a staff of the company.
According to her, she returned from South Africa where she was taken for treatment as a result of the crash because there was no enough money to pay for medicals she sustained pelvic dislocation, fracture of the distal left radius, blunt chest and abdominal injuries.
“According to the medical report from the hospital in South Africa, I was declared to be in need of continual intensive and extensive physiotherapy rehabilitation and pain management in order to be functional again. The management of the airline never did anything about this. My lawyer wrote a letter to the company and copied the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).
“To my surprise, the spokesman to the airline told my lawyer on the phone that I am not a staff of Associated Airlines. He said that according to the Geneva Convention that I am not going to be compensated because I am alive and did not suffer any loss or permanent injury that I will only be compensated on compassionate grounds if possible, she said.
However, when contacted Mr Emode said the issue is being handled by the woman’s lawyer and that of the Associated Airlines.
She also said “my family members were the ones buying the drugs, when the drugs given to me from South Africa finished. Then I decided to ask for my one and half month salary that they owed me since 2012, when the company was temporarily suspended in June 2012, which they paid me in January.
She said the airline refused to compensate her because they accused her of granting interview to Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) when she came back from South Africa.
“I only told AIB the truth about the crash. In fairness to the crew and passengers that died, I don’t need to hide any thing from AIB. My personal effect recovered from the wreckage has not been given back to me and it has been returned to Associated by AIB. As you are seeing me. I am in deep pains; I need money to take care of myself, I cannot stand for along time”, she said.
The chairman of the occasion, Capt Brikemi Porbeni, said he would discuss the issue with NCAA for not doing what it was expected to do in aircraft and aviation regulations, promising that the regulatory body would definitely get to her.
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Business
BVN Enrolments Rise 6% To 67.8m In 2025 — NIBSS
The Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS) has said that Bank Verification Number (BVN) enrolments rose by 6.8 per cent year-on-year to 67.8 million as at December 2025, up from 63.5 million recorded in the corresponding period of 2024.
In a statement published on its website, NIBSS attributed the growth to stronger policy enforcement by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the expansion of diaspora enrolment initiatives.
NIBSS noted that the expansion reinforces the BVN system’s central role in Nigeria’s financial inclusion drive and digital identity framework.
Another major driver, the statement said, was the rollout of the Non-Resident Bank Verification Number (NRBVN) initiative, which allows Nigerians in the diaspora to obtain a BVN remotely without physical presence in the country.
A five-year analysis by NIBSS showed consistent growth in BVN enrolments, rising from 51.9 million in 2021 to 56.0 million in 2022, 60.1 million in 2023, 63.5 million in 2024 and 67.8 million by December 2025. The steady increase reflects stronger compliance with biometric identity requirements and improved coverage of the national banking identity system.
However, NIBSS noted that BVN enrolments still lag the total number of active bank accounts, which exceeded 320 million as of March 2025.
The gap, it explained, is largely due to multiple bank accounts linked to single BVNs, as well as customers yet to complete enrolment, despite the progress recorded.
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