Emerging aviation hub in Uyo and the naysayers // aviation hub in Uyo /// Current Aviation News In Nigeria-World
Emerging
aviation hub in Uyo and the naysayers
By George
Erhobor
THE remarkable success that Ibom Air has recorded in less than
two years of operation has once again brought to the fore, what could be
achieved when leaders demonstrate the political will to take decisions on
issues they know are in public interest, no matter how unpopular those
decisions might appear to be.
The decision by Governor Udom Emmanuel of Akwa Ibom State, in
2019, to establish a government-owned airline wasn’t one that went down well
with some people in the state, especially naysayers and cynics who are wont to
criticise every of his actions but who, as events have often shown, cannot see
what the governor sees while taking those actions.
Examples abound all over the state – in infrastructure,
industrialisation, healthcare delivery, agriculture, etc. – of decisions that
were criticised at the beginning, but which have turned out to be in the best
interest of the people of the state. Ibom Air is one of them.
The success of Nigeria’s
youngest airline, the first to be established by a state government anywhere in
Africa, is evident in the fact that it has, within so short a period, won the
hearts of air travellers on routes it covers, for its efficiency, quality
services, safety, ability to keep to schedules and high level of
professionalism by the staff, both on ground and in the air.
The acceptance of the Uyo-based airline by the air travelling
public is reflected in the fact that in less than two years of coming into
existence, it is operating flights to Abuja, the nation’s capital; Lagos, the
country’s commercial nerve centre, Calabar and Enugu. And there are plans to
expand the routes, especially with the acquisition, August last year, of the
fifth Bombardier CRJ900 sleek-bodied aircraft.
As a regular traveller on the Abuja-Lagos and Abuja-Uyo routes,
I have found Ibom Air the ideal airline for today’s busy executive or
businessman who has to work at different locations at different times. On the
numerous occasions I have used the airline on those routes, I cannot remember
when I had to contend with flight delays, which could sometimes run into hours
– something that is common with some airlines.
Apart from the Abuja-Lagos
route which is the busiest in the country, on which all the airlines operate
more than one flight daily, the Abuja-Uyo route is the other one on which I can
travel, return, same day, and only on Ibom Air.
I do not face the need to pass the night in the Akwa Ibom State
capital because there is no return flight outside the state when I am done with
the business that takes me there. I do so only when it is dictated by the
length of time I would spend in the state.
Apart from the revenue Ibom
Air would generate, including foreign exchange, there is the public relations
angle of taking the name of the state beyond the shores of Nigeria when it
commences international operations with flights to Ghana, Cameroun, Equatorial
Guinea, Gabon, Sao Tome and Principe, etc.
The success of this effort will become manifest with more
investments coming into areas such as agriculture, hospitality of which the
state has comparative advantage over many states, manufacturing, etc. This will
result in employment generation and, ultimately, increase in living standard of
the people.
An important factor that has made Ibom Air a success story in so
short a time is the absence of government control in its day-to-day operations.
Ibom Air is one of the channels through which the government
hopes to make Akwa Ibom an aviation hub in West Africa. The other channel is
the Victor Attah International Airport. The government’s commitment to making
this plan a reality could be seen in the speed with which it is pursuing
construction of the airport’s new terminal building which has commissioning date
of December 2021. The new building is designed to be able to cope with the
volume of passengers it is expected to handle when international flight
operations begin in February 2022.
A major plank that will stimulate business at the airport is the
MRO (maintenance, repair and overhaul) facility for which the government has
awarded a contract for its construction. The facility is expected to be a game
changer in the drive to make the state an aviation hub, considering the fact
that there is none of its kind in the whole of West Africa.
An airport that compares with those in other parts of the world
will present Akwa Ibom as a state with the right infrastructure that is
required for investments to thrive. This is what investors need to respond
positively to government’s investment drive. When this happens, the state will
be the better for it in terms of industrialisation, job creation and improved
standard of living.
Nigeria News Paper
Akwa Ibom State
God’s State
Awajiokanubon Cares
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