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Nigeria’s Aviation Corruption: Airlines Stop Payment Of Charges - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigeria’s Aviation Corruption: Airlines Stop Payment Of Charges by awodman: 4:34pm On Nov 03, 2013
The crisis buffeting Nigeria’s troubled aviation industry
escalated on Sunday with Nigerian airlines announcing that they will no longer pay any money to aviation agencies until the sector is rid of corruption and corrupt people.

Stella Oduah, Nigeria’s embattled aviation minister,
testified before the House of Representatives Committee
on Aviation on 31 October following revelations that the
Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA, bought two BMW
bullet-proof cars for her at the hefty sum of N255 million.
Oduah denied allegations against her and put all blame on others, but documents show she approved the purchase of the expensive cars that were not budgeted for and that were beyond her approval limit of N100 million.

The Airline Operators of Nigeria, AON, announced on
Sunday that Nigerian carriers have stopped remitting all
fees to aviation agencies because of the gargantuan
corruption rocking the sector.

The remittances of aviation charges stopped on 1
November, said Mohammed Tukur, who spoke on behalf of the airlines.

Tukur said the airlines stopped remitting any money to the NCAA, the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency, NAMA,the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, FAAN, and other relevant aviation bodies to protest against the rot in the sector.

He warned that Nigerian airlines may also ground their
operations if nothing is done to ‘clean up’ the sector.

“Due to the ongoing crises, we have resolved to stop the
remittances of all charges, both current and outstanding
debts to the agencies, pending the time they reform or
come clean on the taxes and charges they have collected
which runs into several billions of naira,” Tukur said on
behalf of Nigerian airlines.

The airlines argued that while aviation charges have
continued to skyrocket, the money paid has continued to
be misused by the aviation ministry and agencies to buy
expensive cars.

Consequently, AON called on the federal government to
intervene in the astronomical charges imposed on Nigerian airlines.

“The suspension of payment of taxes, charges took effect
from November 1, 2013. We call on the Federal
Government and all concerned to set up investigative
panel to resolve these anomalies,” Tukur said.

The airlines have been struggling with numerous charges,including landing and parking charges, remittance of five per cent taxes on every ticket sold, fuel tax, multiple navigational charges, airport tax as well as very expensive office spaces among other numerous taxes.

The $3000 and $4000 newly introduced by the NCAA for
charter operators with Nigerian registered aircraft paying
$3000 and foreign registered charter operator parting with $4000 for a single take-off and landing.

Analysts say the numerous charges imposed on airlines are eventually passed on to Nigerian travellers who pay
expensive air fairs for poor services.

The carriers expressed disappointment with obsolete
infrastructure dotting the nation’s airports and epileptic
navigational tools that many say have contributed to air
crashes and serious air incidents in the country.

Tukur said AON was studying the involvement of two of its members with the reported BMW car scam and may be sanctioned them if found culpable.

The House of Representative Committee on Aviation
probing the alleged scam had fingered an airline operator
(name withheld) for its involvement in the procurement of
the two limousine cars allegedly acquired for Oduah.

Beyond Nigeria, it was learnt that an international
organisation has written the government to express
concerns over safety issues in the Nigerian aviation sector
as well as the loss of independence of the country’s
aviation regulatory body-the NCAA.

This has further heightened the fear that Nigeria may lose
its coveted Category One aviation safety status granted the country four years ago by the United States Federal
Aviation Administration, FAA.

pmnewsnigeria.com/2013/11/03/nigerias-aviation-corruption-airlines-stop-payment-of-charges/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+PmNewsNigeria+%28PM+News+Nigeria%29
Re: Nigeria’s Aviation Corruption: Airlines Stop Payment Of Charges by awodman: 4:36pm On Nov 03, 2013
This action by the so called Airline Operators reinforces my belief that Stella is been "lynched" because she has changed the old order as regards the aviation sector..

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