Hundreds
of air travellers were on Thursday stranded at the Lagos airport
following the grounding of Chanchangi and IRS airlines by the Nigerian
Civil Aviation Authority for having only one operational aircraft each
in their fleets.
With the earlier suspension of flight
operations of two other domestic carriers, Dana Air and Associated
Airlines, air travels to destinations within the country have become
increasingly difficult, thereby leaving potential passengers at the
mercy of the few available operators, who have capitalised on the
situation to hike fares.
Many
desperate passengers were milling around the counters of the few airlines in
operation and scrambling to get seats on the available planes at both
the General Aviation Terminal and Murtala Muhammed Airport Terminal 2 of
the Lagos airport.
The situation resulted in a marginal increase in airfares to various destinations in the country.
For instance, Aerocontractors’ Lagos to
Abuja flight, which cost between N18,000 and N22,000, attracted N28,000
on Thursday afternoon.
A flight ticket to Abuja from Lagos on
Medview Airlines sold for between N25,500 and N30,000 depending on the
time of flight, instead of the average of N18,000 previously, while Arik
Air ticket on the same route sold for N35,000.
NCAA had grounded the operations of
Chanchangi and IRS Airlines because each of them had only one
operational aircraft and the grounded airlines were awaiting the NCAA audit, a
necessary step before they can be allowed to operate commercial flights
again.
Also, the IRS Airline was grounded after
its plane with about 92 passengers on board made an emergency landing
at the Kaduna airport as a result of hydraulic failure.
Dana Air’s operations were similarly grounded on October 6 for what the NCAA described as “operational audit.”
Currently, there are only four domestic
airlines in operation with 38 aircraft as against 56 early this year,
with Arik Air having 24 aircraft for both domestic and international
flight operations; Medview, four; and Aero, 10.
This is the third time that Dana’s
operations will be suspended since its plane crashed on June 3, 2012 in
Lagos, killing about 153 passengers on board and 10 people on the
ground.
It was grounded between June 5, 2012 and January 3, 2013 and again in the middle of this year.
The Assistant General Secretary, Airline
Operators of Nigeria, Alhaji Muhammed Tukur, confirmed that IRS Airline
had not been flying for some time now.
He said the NCAA had claimed that the airline could not function properly with only one aircraft.
Tukur said, “The truth is that IRS has
more than one aircraft, the only thing is that the other one is
currently undergoing C check abroad.
Culled from punch.
Passengers are suffering and the aviation minister has gone for pilgrimage? This is insane.
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ReplyDeleteThis couuntry is upsidedown.wen illiterates rule literates what do u expect!wen d reward for politics is riches instead of improvement of society and integrity,what do u expect!
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