Aviation hardly gives passengers a second chance to survive
Aviation hardly gives passengers a second chance to
survive
By Owei
Lakemfa
Nigeria is leadership-challenged at all levels, including an
inability to regulate basic sectors. While the effects will be slow to
manifest, the failure to properly regulate the aviation industry is quite
frightening. No, I am not referring to the frequent crashes of military
aircraft. I am talking about large civil passenger airlines.
On May 19, 2021, I flew into Abuja from Calabar by 3pm to catch
a 5pm flight to Kano on Max Air. But the flight had been rescheduled for
11.55pm. That meant I had to spend nine hours at the airport! The alternatives
were not attractive: they include making the long drive to the city and
returning by 10pm or booking into an hotel. This will not happen in countries
with proper regulatory agencies.
Even in international flights, where passengers have long hours
to connect flight, the airline provides accommodation, transportation and food
for the passenger. The Max Air officials had no apologies. I was to realise
that this was their normal system of operation. As I checked in and complained
to the officials, an airport official told me I was in fact lucky as a similar
flight the previous day, took off at 2am!
I reminded the airline
officials that the Federal Government had a nationwide curfew from 12am to 4am,
so it meant we might on arrival, have to stay at the the
Aminu Kano International Airport, MAKIA. They bursted out laughing. The message
was: who obeys this government?
At the departure lounge, I met other victims of the airline
scheduled to fly to other parts of the country. These included media colleagues
travelling to Bauchi for the Nigeria Institute of Public Relations, NIPR
Fellowship Awards. Their morning flight had been rescheduled
to 4pm. Then as they waited, it was moved to 9pm.
Finally it departed at 10pm. One
of them said that the airline seemed to have a lone aircraft flying; that
the one that took passengers to Lagos was the one taking them to Bauchi. He
calculated that the aircraft was likely to return past mid night to pick the
passengers to Kano. He was correct; we finally departed at 1am!
At the Bayero University, I complained to one of my hosts, who
told me I was lucky. He narrated the experience of a family member whose flight
was delayed from early morning until far into the evening.
Then I read in the newspapers
that the Max Air flight that took off from Kano for Abuja airport at 1:21pm on
Tuesday, May 18, 2021 carrying the Emir of Kano, Aminu Ado Bayero and 139 other
passengers, had a bird strike, which forced one of the two-engine aircraft to malfunction,
prompting the pilot to make an air return.
Some of the passengers said the bird strike caused a big bang in
the aircraft and that they were petrified at their near death
experience. However, the Max Air Director of Maintenance, Muhammad
Mubaraq who was not in the aircraft, told the media: “It is very wrong to say
they had a near-death experience.”
That same day, the Aero
Contractors’ Boeing 737-500 with the registration number 5N-BKR flying from
Port Harcourt to Abuja had a similar bird strike experience.
These life-threatening incidents are quite avoidable as the
installation of bird strike avoidance radar system at our airports would
have taken care of them. When I scanned the internet for costs, I discovered
that a 20-kilometre mobile or fixed version was advertised for as low as
$200,000 per airport. How much is this compared to the possible loss of
140 lives and loss of aircraft?
These issues I have raised are not as frightening as the
aviation authorities allowing an airline to serially endanger passenger lives
for six weeks before waking up to take the mild action of suspending the
airline to force it carry out basic safety steps. But the Azman Air, which had
a sense of immunity, felt so insulted by the suspension that it issued a statement
accusing the regulatory Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, NCAA, of witch-hunt.
It also made allegations of unprofessionalism against the NCAA
Director-General, Musa Nuhu, whom it accused of attempting to extort N15
million from Azman. It was only at this point the regulator found it fit to
reveal the unprofessional and dangerous manner the airline was operating. In so
doing, it unwittingly exposed its own failure to act timeously in the interests
of the passengers and public.
The revelations which the airline did not contest included NCAA
inspectors on February 10, 2021, at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport,
Abuja, finding Azman Air maintenance engineer
carrying out the replacement of the right-hand main landing gear wheel
assembly of their Boeing 737-500 without referring to the
manufacturer’s maintenance manual. This was a violation of the Civil Aviation
Regulations. The regulator fined both Azman Air and the engineer but they
refused to pay the fine.
The next day, the same Azman aircraft Boeing 737-500 during
take-off in Kaduna en-route Lagos, lost a component part which fell off the
aircraft. The Air Traffic Control, ATC, notified the Captain, who
rather than abort the flight, chose to continue. Even at that, on arrival in
Lagos, he failed to make an entry in the aircraft technical logbook.
The Azman Air maintenance team in Lagos was notified that the
part which fell from the aircraft was the no 3 Main Landing Gear, MLG,
heatshield. But rather make the necessary entry in the technical logbook and
rectify the defect, Azman released the aircraft for a scheduled passenger
flight from Lagos to Abuja. The NCAA inspectors in Abuja were notified and
grounded the aircraft, forcing Azman to effect the necessary repairs.
Five days later, on February 16, 2021, NCAA inspectors
reported that the same aircraft “suffered burst tyres while landing in Lagos,
with resultant severe damage to the aircraft engine and fuselage.”
On Monday March 15, 2021, Azman Air Boeing 737-500 aircraft
with registration 5N-YMS, departed Kaduna for Lagos. The NCAA report was that:
“The Captain reported a loud bang after retracting the landing gear during
take-off but decided to proceed to Lagos as all parameters were normal.” Air
Traffic informed the Captain that the cause of the bang were burst tyres and
that indeed, the debris were on the Kaduna runway.
Inspection in Lagos showed that the aircraft had two severely
damaged tyres and “a damaged hydraulic line with resultant hydraulic leak and
damage to the hydraulic reservoir.” It was only at this point, the regulator
decided to suspend the airline. Six weeks later, the suspension was lifted.
Despite the general degeneracy in the country, it is necessary
that the aviation industry maintains safety standards because air travel hardly
gives passengers a second chance of survival.
Nigeria News Paper
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