I’m not aware of any court-stopping Nigeria Air-Sirika

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I’m not aware of any court-stopping Nigeria Air-Sirika

The Minister of Aviation Hadi Sirika has disclosed that he is not aware of any court order stopping the setting up of a national carrier for the country

The Minister was reacting to reports that some airline and their promoters had approached the court to stop the take-off of the airline set to commence operations in December 2022.

According to the Minister, there is no law in the country stopping the Federal Government from setting up or widwifing an airline for the country, stressing that he cannot see any rationale for any court of law stopping somebody or a nation from setting up an airline.

The Minister who was in Lagos to commend the successful completion of the 18/L runway of the Lagos airport that was completed last week more than 16 years since the runway was left without Airfield Lighting (AFL) said he was yet to be served with court papers by some of the operators who were alleged to have gone to court to stop the carrier.

“I am not aware that anyone is in court. I don’t have any court papers; otherwise, I am not interested. I cannot see any rational court that will say that I am stopping somebody from establishing a company because Nigeria Air is a limited liability company known to the Nigerian laws in the corporate affairs commission.

“If anybody wants to come and invest in that company, there is no law in Nigeria that stops him from doing so. If there are foreigners coming to invest, nobody stops them from investing. You can own a company 100 percent. What would you say to Shell, Unilever, and Julius Berger? There are companies in Nigeria registered by Nigerian law and people are coming to invest. This is what we want. We want Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). If people or Nigerians are investing in the airline with over $200 million in Nigeria and so what.  We want more of them”.

Sirika said he carried everyone along and disclosed that when the airline was still in its embryonic stages, he reached out to Air Peace chairman, Mr. Allen Onyema, Azman Chairman, Abdulmunaf Yunusa Sarina, and others to invest in the new airline but was rebuffed by the airline owners, stressing some of them later accused him of not making the request verbal.

“I heard that the airline owners said that they were not carried along. If you were there at the National Assembly, I told them where I met them like the Max Air, Azman, Air Peace, Ibom, everybody where I met them and told them to please come and partner in this airline and own it, telling them that it is meant for the private sector. I told Air Peace to come and invest in this one and one of them said to me that I should make it formal.

“I said to him that I met you in your own place, met with you and invited you and told him that I have put it in all places as adverts. I also put it in the Economist, on television, and also put it on the website. How formal can that be? I always beg them to say all you stakeholders are invited to be owners of the airline as private sector people. Nobody will say he was not invited”.

Speaking on the planned demolition of many structures at the Lagos airport to give room to the rail project to link the international wing of the Lagos airport with the domestic terminal, Sirika said if he had his way, he would commence the demolition exercise tomorrow.

“Assuming that is even correct, I wish it would happen tomorrow morning. Is this eyesore what you want as an airport? Aerotropolis is part of the roadmap. Don’t you want a rail link between the old and the new terminal? Don’t you want better structures with cinemas, spars, shopping malls, banks, airline offices, and befitting headquarters of FAAN in Lagos?”.

 

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