Connect with us

Opinion

Addressing Air Travel Issues In Nigeria

Published

on

It is unfortunate that the face-off between the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Aminu Ado Bayero, and Air Peace Airline is taking this turn. While the Emir through, his cousin and chief of protocol, Isa Bayero, has written to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), accusing the airline of disrespecting the Emir and, by extension, the people of Kano for not delaying a flight for the sake of the Emir and his entourage and has demanded a 72 hours published and personal apology by the Chief Executive Officer of Air Peace airline, Mr Allen Onyema, to the Emir and his Emirate, Air Peace management had denied the allegation of disrespect, saying that the decision not to halt an already fully booked, taxiing plane for up to 40 minutes was to protect the image of the Emir and the airline.
Knowing how tense the nation is at present and how gullible and unreasonable some Nigerians can be, we hope this issue does not degenerate into ethnic and religious squabbles. We need peace in Nigeria and the two contending parties should try and resolve this service provider/customer matters amicably as soon as possible in the interest of peace.
Having said that, it is the hope of many Nigerians that this saga will help in addressing some of the anomalies in Nigeria’s aviation sector. Ours is a country where top politicians and other highly placed individuals are “exempted” from airport rules and protocol. A top government official, a top military officer arrives at the airport with a briefcase and no airport official and members of other numerous agencies at the airport borders to search the bag to know its content. Rather, they will all be saluting him and those begging for crumbs will be busy doing so, neglecting their job
It is in Nigeria’s airports that plane take off time is delayed, waiting for a special person to arrive at the airport and board. Apparently, that was why the Emir’s Chief of Protocol felt very bad because such preferential treatment has been extended to Governors, Ministers, lawmakers and what have you in the past and he could not understand why a whole Emir should be denied such an offer.  He said he personally called Onyema to inform him of the delay of their flight from Banjul and requested him to assist by delaying their departing flight to Kano as a mark of respect to the revered Emir of Kano. But he refused and promised that he would not do that. “I personally took this as an insult and a flagrant show of disrespect to his highness and the Kano people at large”, he said. So, however important or urgent the schedule of other passengers is, it is not important. Afterall, they are nobodies.
Can we talk about the issue of delays and cancellation of flights? I doubt if there is no air traveller in Nigeria that has no ugly tale about this. Sometimes, you get the information about the cancellation of your flight or change in the flight schedule when you are already at the airport terminal. A person going to Lagos for a 10 O’clock meeting leaves his house by 6 O’clock in order not to be late and by noon he is still at Port Harcourt International Airport because his flight was delayed. And the worst is that, most of the time, no apologies will be rendered to passengers, no reason for the delay given, not to talk of compensating the passengers for their time.
So, it’s high time Nigerians made noise about what the airlines are doing to them. On many occasions we have seen people fight at the airport because of cancellation of their flights, flight delays and other nonchalant attitude of airline operators and staff towards passengers. And we are bound to see more of that if the operators do not improve on their service and customer care especially with the recent hike in airfares. From about N23,000 airline passengers now pay N50,000 for one hour, one way economy ticket and you expect them to smile at you when they do not get commensurate value for their money?
The painful thing is that with the poor state of our roads and the high level of insecurity in the country, rail and land are still not preferred options especially for those who can afford the exorbitant airfare. The other day, the upper chamber of the National Assembly, the Senate, as a way of mitigating the effect of the increased flight ticket prices, asked the Federal Government to declare a state of emergency on the nation’s federal roads as well as immediately make good its indebtedness to the Federal Road Maintenance Agency (FERMA), to enable the agency carry out its duty of rehabilitating federal roads. The lawmakers rightly expressed worry that the increase in airfares would increase the pressure on the neglected and dilapidated Nigerian roads and further worsen their state.
Incidentally, while the lawmakers should be commended for their concern about the state of the roads and the solution they proffered which may make Nigerian roads better; their suggestion is far from being an answer to the issues at hand.  Doctors will always tell you that for a permanent cure of a disease, you don’t treat the symptom but you should rather trace the root cause of the ailment. Likewise in Nigeria’s situation, we should do away with all the selfish, palliative measures to our problems and get to the root of the problem. The unfortunate thing is that virtually everybody in authority knows the solution but they would always consider their selfish gain far above the interest of the citizens and choose not to do the most appropriate thing.
The main problem arises from the fact that we have refused to refine fuel locally. We are a major oil producing country, yet we do not have one functional refinery in the country, not on the national, regional or state level. We prefer to export our high-quality crude oil and import the refined product including the contaminated fuel because that enriches the pockets of a few privileged individuals. The recent hike in the price of air tickets is blamed on the high cost of imported aviation fuel and other operational costs which is heightened by the poor state of the nation’s currency.
With Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last week, the price of crude oil has risen to over $100 per barrel. Other oil producing countries which have the capacity to refine locally are reaping but here we are in Nigeria moaning because the crude oil price increase in the international market affects the prices of the imported products.  Little wonder some people have called for the head of whoever suggested the crude oil export and importation of refined product in the first place.
So, we must deal with the real issues pulling us down as a nation for us to have a solution. As we are told, Dangote refinery will soon come on stream but it will be foolhardy to put the lives of over 200 million people in the hands of one man. Yes, fuel is our life in this country. Whatever happens around it touches the farmer, the school children, the market women and everybody in the country. It touches every sector – aviation, agriculture, manufacturing and others. And the moment we begin to produce what we consume, the better for us. If the fracas between the Emir and Air Peace will instigate this, so be it.

By: Calista Ezeaku

Continue Reading

Opinion

Other Sides In Junior Pope’s Death

Published

on

The tragic boat mishap of Wednesday, April 10, 2024, which claimed the lives of popular Nollywood actor, Mr John Paul Obumneme Odonwodo, popularly known as Junior Pope, and four others, has sent shock-waves across the Nigerian movie industry, and set the social media buzzing with reactions.
A contingent of 12 movie crew members had set out for a boat journey from the River Niger Cable point, a waterside jetty at Asaba in Delta State, to cross to the other side of River Niger, into Anam, a riverine community in Anambra State, for the shooting of a movie set titled ‘Another side of Life’ produced by Adanma Luke. Unfortunately, a series of avoidable events culminated the journey into an ill-fated expedition that sent fives lives to ‘the other side of life.’ The incident made the movie’s eventual ban a nullity, having played-out its symbolic meanings in real life while in the making, rather than on envisaged screens.
An avoidable incident, it exposed our society’s casual attitudes towards marine and general safety, as well as our endemic superstitions, while telling, on several flaps, other side tales of reality in the accounts of what transpired during the production, or rather, play of Adanma’s ‘Another side of Life.’
While veteran actor and Senior Adviser on Military Relations to the President of Actors’ Guild of Nigeria, Mr Steve Eboh, claimed he missed joining the ill-fated boat because he arrived too early before the crew, and had to go back, the producer, Adanma Luke, claimed she missed it because she came too late.
A journey’s jolly take-off from Asaba, Delta state, which ended tragically in its return from the other side in Anambra State, proved to be a rascally journey that showed the other side of rascality, even as T. C. Okoye claimed that pre-performing of obeisance to some marine spirits saved his life. But it was T. C. Okoye who had to hang unto a boat’s anchor in the face of death, rather than rely on the powers of the spirits he had appeased with Fanta, to await rescue from mortal men – sensible men, whose advise that one needs wear life jack during marine journeys – he had forsook, yet gave glory to his rituals after rescue.
Conversely, one may flip the flap to consider the other side of T. C. Okoye’s rituals to ruminate on other possibilities. Could the ringing of bells, spraying of money and snacks, and pouring of Fanta, have evoked the anger of the ‘marine spirits’ as rumoured, or distracted the boat driver, to the point of accident? And as reported by The Punch, what’s the significance of T. C. Okoye ‘dashing’ ritual money to innocent children whom circumstance made to be by the riverside?
Also, the argument by Mr Steve Eboh, that “If the star actors in that boat had wanted to wear life jackets, they would have been given the jackets” holds no ground, because the guild, as well as all the marine transport stakeholders, should have enforced strict safety compliance by all voyagers. It is therefore commendable that the Anambra State Commissioner of Police, Aderemi Adeoye, has ordered exhaustive investigations into the matter to determine criminal liability of all persons involved.
However, in the melee of pandemonium that accompanied rescue efforts, Nollywood celebrities, our society’s supposed role models, prioritized superstitious rescusitation over sure medical practice, rushing victims between spiritualists and hospitals, until a ‘pope’ whose work and journey had bound with the superstitious, died amidst superstition. Indeed, it’s during crises, when people care less about ‘packaging,’ that truth and the real personality of humans stand bare and naked.
While medical personnel who got their chance late had certified Jnr Pope dead, our star-persons held unto their spiritual advisers who claimed his spirit coming back to life, up until reality finally dawned that pope’s spirit has permanently crossed to the other side of life.
Regrettably, the reality has not fully dawned, otherwise three corpses shouldn’t have been buried by the riverside as dictated by spiritualists, and Jnr Pope’s family shouldn’t be worried about what would happen, as rumoured threatened of his three children, if his corpse is not buried by the riverside. However, it appears that having encountered the influence of a frontline celebrity, the spirits have turned capricious by bending divinely demands to accepting two cows, as rumoured, in exchange for Jnr Pope’s corpse being buried elsewhere.
According to the Anambra State Police Public Relations Officer, SP Tochukwu Ikenga, a team of rescuers comprising men of the Anambra State Marine Police Command, the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) and the Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria, with the aid of fisher men, rescued seven persons alive to the Anambra side, while two retrieved corpses were sent across the other side, to the Delta State Marine Police Command jetty where Nollywood officials stood waiting. Of other three victims, two corpses were rescued next day, while a third was thrown out by river tides, all of whom; Abigail Fredrick (Vice Chairman of Costumer Designers Guild of Nigeria, and Akwa-Ibom State-born make-up artist), Precious Oforum (Sound engineer) and Joseph Anointing (Gaffer), have since been buried by the riverside, according to local belief.
However, what the police PRO’s statement didn’t reveal is if Jnr Pope’s corpse was sent to the other side in Delta after all the back and forth between spiritualists and medical personnel within Anambra, or if it was sent straight upon rescue to Delta state, but mysteriously found its way back to Anam, on the Anambra side.
It’s unfortunate that Nollywood which set out in its early days to expose superstitious beliefs and practices in our societies, in the hopes of enlightening the minds of the masses, and to curb the manace, has made many believe it’s rather reinforcing superstition in the ways it condicts the movie industry business.
Members of the showbiz in general, now appear to be key protagonists of superstition to the point that, being perceived as role models, so many youths have been drawn to lives of unrealistic dreams and materialism, which often get pursued through ritualism, with its attendant crimes.
Joseph Nwankwo
Continue Reading

Opinion

The Value Of Books And Reading

Published

on

The quality, quantity and diversity of books produced by a society are important indicators of that society’s level of development. . . .”–Valdehusa (1985).
April 23 of every year is marked around the world as ‘World Book and Copyright Day.’ Also known as ‘International Day of The Book,’ it is a Day set aside by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), to promote reading, publishing and copyright. The Day aims to change lives through a love of books and shared reading.  The theme for the 2024 ‘World Book Day’ is: “Read Your Way.” This year’s theme calls on everyone to let go of pressure and expectations, giving children a choice – and a chance to enjoy reading.
According to Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO: “Books have the unique ability to entertain and to teach. They are at once a means of exploring realms beyond our personal experience through exposure to different authors, universes and cultures, and a means of accessing the deepest recesses of our inner selves.”  Therefore, the power of books should be leveraged to combat isolation, reinforce ties between people, and expand our horizons, while stimulating our minds and creativity. It is critical to take the time to read on our own, or with our children.
Did you know that The Bible stands out as the most widely translated and distributed book worldwide? Yes, the Bible is by far the most widely translated and distributed book! Its wisdom has reached and helped more people than any other book or publication. 96.5 percent of the world’s population has access to the Bible. The Bible is available (in whole or in part) in over 3,300 languages, and the estimated number of copies of the Bible produced is 5billion, far more than any other book in history.  Which other book(s) do you enjoy or have you enjoyed reading? As for me, one book I am currently enjoying reading is a 400 – 500 page healthcare handbook titled, Where there is no doctor, authored by David Werner. It is a very valuable healthcare handbook that I have found to be very very beneficial! In fact, this healthcare handbook has been fondly described by some as “the ‘Bible’ of health education,” and I strongly recommend that every family should have a copy of this book at home. Apart from this book, I also enjoy reading for pleasure children’s books, such as those I have found on booksmart.worldreader.org and www.africanstorybook.org. What about you? What books have you enjoyed or do you enjoy reading? Do you know about the book industry? There are three major sectors of the book industry. They are: publishers, booksellers and libraries.
Book publishing is channelled towards promoting learning and expanding knowledge.  In a strict sense, book publishing starts from the point of conceptualisation of the ideas for the book by the author, and ends at the very last stage – the end-user (the reader). The history of book publishing in Nigeria can be traced to the establishment of the very first publishing press in Calabar, in 1846, by Rev. Hope Waddel of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland Mission. The press was used to print Bible lessons and later arithmetic books for schools.
In 1854, another Missionary based in Abeokuta, Rev. Henry Townsend of the Church Missionary Society (CMS), established a Press. Five years later (1859), he used it to print the very first newspaper in Nigeria – ‘Iwe Irohin.’ Thereafter, notable Nigerians like Herbert Macaulay established the first indigenous newspaper in 1926, called Lagos Daily News. Also, in the same year, Daily Times made its debut.  In 1949, Oxford University Press (OUP) floated a sales outlet in Nigeria. This action attracted many foreign-based publishing firms to Nigeria, such as Macmillan, Longman and others. The first published book in Nigeria by OUP was released in 1963, when its local branch published ‘Ijala Ere Ode’, a Yoruba poetry genre by Oladiipo Yemitan. Aside from the foreign companies, many other home-based publishing houses were architected by indigenous entrepreneurs. The book publishing industry in Nigeria has continued to enjoy drastic growth ever since.
However, in the last few decades, the Nigerian indigenous book publishing industry has experienced a downturn due to numerous challenges facing the industry, including: book piracy, proliferation of unqualified author -.publishers, lack of capital, and inability to provide adequate numbers of high-quality books.
Other challenges include: poor reading culture, infrastructural decay, dearth of expertise, incessant rancour among the major stakeholders, and so forth.
Therefore, here are some suggestions for developing our book publishing industry in Nigeria: Stakeholders such as government, publishers, authors, regulators, booksellers, libraries, and readers should cooperate among themselves and contribute their quota immensely towards the development of a virile book publishing industry.  Private investors such as banks, finance houses and influential individuals should participate, especially in terms of massive capital injection.
Ighakpe writes in from FESTAC Town, Lagos.
 Daniel Ighakpe
Continue Reading

Opinion

Let The Poor Breathe

Published

on

In  the history of our nation, only petroleum products have suffered more incessant increments in prices than electricity supply in all public products and services. Unfortunately, those are the two main things that impact mostly on our lives and national economy. While the increment in petroleum products’ prices is always attributed to the price of crude oil at the international market and the need to curb the scarcity by encouraging the supply, the increment in the electricity tariff has never had any justifiable reason and no service improvement afterwards. In fact, the electricity supply has gone far worse now that the tariff has gone up by over 300 percent. One of the underlying reasons for the planned electricity subsidy removal as unconsciously relayed by the Minister of Power on TVC News is the sabotage of the system by those collecting the subsidy money to maintain the assets. He said: “These are assets that we spend the country’s money on, and our brothers deliberately sabotage them. So, you can see that some people are hiding somewhere that do not want this sector to work”.
Just as the petroleum subsidy must go because the government is too impotent to handle the petroleum subsidy racketeers, the electricity subsidy has to also go at the expense of the poor masses and no one has been prosecuted for it.
When the oligarchs rob us blind, the poor masses are made to pay. The only tool that seems to be at the disposal of this government for the combat of economic challenges brought by the corruption of the political elites is to make the poor masses suffer deprivations.
No doubt, stopping the monkeys from the banana plantation is a Herculean task. But those with their thinking caps on will not need to destroy the banana plantation to ward off the monkeys. The Federal Government has taken several decisions in the last one year that are akin to milking the debilitated cow to feed the virile buffalo. The electricity tariff now has to go up to make more money for the oligarchs that sold our collective heritage to themselves and have been taking money from us for next-to-nothing service delivery.In order to win the supports of the poor masses of Nigeria, the tariff was classified and made to seem like it isn’t going to affect the poor, while the poor will invariably be the worse for it. Most of those on Band A electricity tariff, who are to be paying very exorbitantly for electricity are companies producing most of our consumables and utility items. With the high cost of electricity, the production cost will go high and consequently, the cost of the products.  By the time the effects of the new electricity tariffs take full manifestation, almost everything that can make life meaningful will be beyond the purchasing powers of most Nigerians.
I can not help but to wonder what exactly is left for us to benefit as citizens of this country. Nigeria is rapidly moving towards a capitalist nation, where everything is commercialised and profit at the expense of the citizens is the priority. Medicare and even public education are now being run for profit. The government goes about with the shenanigans of education for all, while it is making education unaffordable to most Nigerians. Even the students’ loan, as badly conceived as it is, is also with interest. Those who have been in power since our democratic dispensation belong to that generation of Nigerians that the nation had been very benevolent to. They were educated for free, got paid salaries as students and given jobs on a platter after graduation. This generation of people got everything from Nigeria and unfortunately have refused to give anything back. They have not only been ungrateful to Nigeria; they have also systematically run the country aground. What a waste of investment Nigeria has made in them! While some countries in this same Africa hardly experience power outage in a year, our own B and A category would at best experience four hours of power outage in a day. These are the ruins they have led our country to in 21st century.
The timing and manner that these anti-welfare policies were introduced are indicative of lack of concern for the citizens of this country. A lot of Nigerians have lost their lives in choking circumstances. Please, let the poor breathe! While trying to rebuild Nigeria, the poor masses should not be made to feel like the eggs in the preparation of omelette. It is very obvious that you do not care about how many eggs are broken, so long as you can have the  hen.

Abdulrasheed   Rabana

Rabana, is a public affairs analyst .

Continue Reading

Trending