Politics
AIB Submits Bill For Road, Rail, Marine Accidents Investigation
The Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) has disclosed that a bill to empower the bureau to investigate rail, road and marine accidents and serious incidents is currently before the Senate.
AIB’s Commissioner, Mr Akin Olateru, confirmed the development to newsmen in Lagos yesterday.
Olateru noted that the Federal Executive Council had approved its proposal for the new draft bill of AIB, adding that the bill was on the table at the upper chamber before the Senate went on recess.
“We are currently working on the possibility and the approval by the National Assembly of AIB going multimodal in our operations.
“Going multimodal means we are not just going to be investigating air accidents alone but we will be investigating rail, marine and road accidents.
“We will be joining other nations around the world who operate the multimodal system.
“Hopefully, before the end of this year, this bill will be passed and that will make AIB Nigeria one of the top nations that operate multimodal system,” he said.
According to him, if an organisation remains stagnant in its operations without research and development, then the world would go pass the organisation.
“Today, if you talked about mobile phone, you will talk of Samsung and Apple, why? Research and development.
“For any company to survive in this world, it must invest heavily on research and development.
“This is why AIB Nigeria went back to the drawing board and came out with the review of our regulation to take care of those things we have missed and to ensure we are on top of our game,” he said.
Olateru said the techniques of accident investigation whether it was road, rail, marine, or air was the same, while the end goal remained how to prevent future occurrence.
He said in preparation for the multimodal system in the last one year, AIB had sent 30 of its investigators to Cranfield University in United Kingdom to train on the multimodal accident investigation.
He said they were all back in Nigeria and it had another two investigators going in September to complete the cycle.
He added that the organisation was also working closely with the U.S.-NTSB and Singapore-NTSB on training.