Friday, August 30, 2013

FAAN Tightens Security at Airports after Stowaway Incident



The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has said additional security measures would be put in place to prevent a reoccurrence of a stowaway from the runways of the nation’s airports.
 
The General Manager, Corporate Communications, FAAN, Mr. Yakubu Dati, said this thursday, while addressing aviation correspondents at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport (MMIA), Ikeja.
He stressed that the additional security measures would specifically be placed on airports without perimeter fencing.
 
Dati said the decision was inline with the recent stowaway incident which occurred at the Benin Airport on August 24.
 
“First, at every airport without fully functional perimeter fence, a FAAN security vehicle will be deployed to a point within full view of the aircraft as it taxies out to take off.
 
“And the FAAN security will maintain visual scrutiny and, if necessary, respond to any situation, until every departing aircraft is safely airborne.
 
“Secondly, bushes at all airports are to be cleared to ensure full view of the perimeter, the control tower, FAAN Fire and Rescue observation posts.
 
“And also to allow aviation security patrol teams have a sweeping view of the entire perimeter of an airport from their duty posts, “ he said.

According to him, static observation posts would be erected at strategic locations within the perimeter fence of all airports to forestall premeditated and inadvertent unauthorised access to the airside.
He said  the measure would be complemented by motorised and foot patrols.
 
Dati, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), noted that the absence of perimeter fences at most of the airports had always posed a challenge to FAAN because of the huge capital outlay required in constructing the fences.

He said some of the fences were as long as 40 kilometres, across the 22 network of airports in the country.
“Most of these projects are expected to commence in 2014, while the remaining ones will be executed in 2015, in line with the transformation agenda in the aviation industry,” he said.

Culled from Thisday

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

FG Approves Cargo Terminal for Asaba Airport



The federal government has approved a cargo terminal that would enable larger aircraft to land at the Asaba airport, Delta State.

Delta State Commissioner for Lands, Survey and Urban Development, Mr Patrick Ferife, disclosed this to journalists in Asaba while conducting members of the Nigerian Guild of Editors round projects executed by Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan-led administration.

He said that the airport as one of the legacies of the governor, since its operation, has made transportation easier while it also created jobs for thousands of people within and outside the state.

 Disclosing that Overland and Arik Air companies were currently operating at the airport, the commissioner explained that Aero Contractors would soon resume services at the airport; a measure that would serve over 30,000 passengers in a month.

According to him, the runway of the airport space could accommodate larger aircraft, pointing out that all professionals and equipment needed for every operation have been put in place.

http://leadership.ng/news/270813/fg-approves-cargo-terminal-asaba-airport

Culled from Leadership

Monday, August 26, 2013

NDLEA may sanction Qatar, Emirates, S’African airlines


Qatar, Emirates, and South African Airways have topped the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency’s list of 14 airlines used by drug traffickers through the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, between January and June.
The agency said it was ready to sanction the airlines for failing to prevent drug trafficking in accordance with the law.

According to a statement by the agency’s Head of Public Affairs, Mitchell Ofoyeju, the other airlines that have been used by drug traffickers are Etihad, British Airways, Arik, Asky, Turkish, Kenyan, KLM, Air France, Virgin Atlantic, Ethiopian and Alitalia airlines.

The statement quoted the NDLEA Chairman, Ahmadu Giade, as saying, “Any airline found to be involved in drug trafficking will be sanctioned. The agency will not hesitate to sanction any airline found culpable in a drug case. Section 25 of the NDLEA Act stipulates that every commercial carrier must take reasonable precaution to prevent the commission of an offence under the Act. Any infringement shall be treated in accordance with the law.”

 Ofoyeju stated that the half-year report of the agency showed that a total of 43 cases of drug seizures were made at the Lagos airport on the 14 airlines.

 “Qatar had nine cases; Emirates, eight; South African, six; and Etihad, three. While seven others, British Airways, Arik, Asky, Turkish, Kenyan, KLM and Air France had two cases each. Virgin Atlantic, Ethiopian and Alitalia airlines recorded one case each,” the statement read in parts.

The agency also identified South Africa, China, Malaysia and the United Kingdom as the top destinations of drug traffickers within the period.

It added that incoming drug seizures came from Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, Panama and Bolivia.
“Outward seizures to 15 countries were also made. They are South Africa, five, China, four, Malaysia and the United Kingdom, three each, while India and Italy had two each. Eight other countries: Thailand, Doha, Germany, Turkey, Mozambique, Senegal, Gabon and Liberia recorded one each.

“Incoming drug seizures made between January and June came from five countries. Brazil led the seizures chart with eight; United Arab Emirates, five; Pakistan and Panama, two each; while Bolivia is one,” Ofoyeju said.

The statement also noted that 253.390kg of drugs worth N2.3bn were intercepted while 41 suspected traffickers were apprehended – 39 males and two females.

NDLEA Airport commander, Mr. Hamza Umar, gave the breakdown of the drugs as follows: Methamphetamine weighed 169.290kg, cannabis, 47.230kg; cocaine 31.475kg; and heroin 5.395kg.
“It should be noted that seizures of methamphetamine and cannabis weighing 169.290kg and 47.230kg respectively were both meant for export,” he said.
http://www.punchng.com/news/ndlea-may-sanction-qatar-emirates-safrican-airlines
 
Culled from Punch

Breach Of Aviation Security Again!




On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.

 http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again
Source: Leadership Newspapers Editorial

On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpuf
On Saturday, a youngster named Daniel Ihekina successfully stowed away in the wheel well of an Arik Air plane 5N-MJG at the Benin City Airport. How he successfully breached the airport’s several security layers and survived the 35-minute Benin City-Lagos flight remains a puzzle. Ironically, it was the same day that a carnival of sorts was playing out at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, where the minister of aviation and the leading lights of the south-east were celebrating the opening of the airport to direct flights by Ethiopian Airways from Addis Ababa.
Buck-passing between Arik Air management whose plane was involved with the Benin City incident and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is unnecessary. Clearly, FAAN should take the blame because its job includes maintenance of security in all of the nation’s airports.  We agree with Arik Air spokesman Mr Banji Ola, who attributed the development to security lapses at the Benin Airport:  “The pilot of Arik Air flight W3 544, departing Benin Airport for Lagos at 9:00am on 24th August, 2013, reported to the control tower the presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200-300 metres at the end of Runway 23. The control tower told the captain that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy. As the captain was making his final turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running towards the airplane. The captain again reported to the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control and that he had been cleared for take-off.”
FAAN spokesman Yakubu Dati said that Arik Air was responsible for the breach by not conducting a check on the plane after the attention of the crew and ground personnel was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac. The procedure for such infraction, he said, is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron for check-up. Yet, Arik Air is known to enjoy a high reputation in security matters. In addition to the screening of passengers by FAAN security personnel, the airline always carries out secondary screening of all passengers and its aircraft prior to boarding of any of its flights. Its security profilers have been trained in the latest technique of screening passengers. The airline has won awards for security consciousness.
The sobering reality is that, had the teenager that stowed away been carrying bombs with a terrorist intent, the current buck-passing wouldn’t have assuaged the ensuing tragedy. Lack of airport perimeter fences aids this kind of breach. Clearly there is something fundamentally wrong with a country that permits such serial security breaches in the high-value turf of air transportation. In May 2010, a taxi driver broke through the security cordon at the Margaret Ekpo Airport, Calabar, and ran his cab into a fully boarded Arik Air Boeing 737-700 NG aircraft. Earlier, an international flight touching down at the Port Harcourt International Airport had run into a herd of cattle on the airport’s tarmac; a disaster was averted by the quick thinking of the pilot and providence.
It is beyond dispute that merely hoping that our airport security will improve and come at par with international best practice is not enough.  Hope is not a plan. The Benin Airport incident should be thoroughly investigated and appropriate sanctions meted out to defaulters.
- See more at: http://leadership.ng/news/260813/breach-aviation-security-again#sthash.gwnywjFc.dpufV

Unkempt Benin Airport Provides Cover For Stowaway lad



Teenager Daniel Ihekina, stowaway on an Arik Air flight from Benin to Lagos on Saturday, might have

entered the Benin Airport Terminal through the several holes in the airport’s barbed-wire perimetre fencing.

Some parts of the barbed wire have broken off, making it easy for animals to stray into the airport.

Around the airport are bush paths through which people walk to another street on the other side.

A large part of the airport’s surrounding is unkempt, some crops are planted in other areas.

Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) officials said no family member had come for Ihekina.

It was gathered in Lagos that the boy might have been handed over to operatives of the State Security Services (SSS), for further interrogation and questioning by the Murtala Muhammed Airport police.

A source said he was taken by aviation security personnel to “Tango City”, a detention facility around the international terminal, before being handed over to the police. The police reportedly completed their interrogation on the circumstances leading to how Ihekina got into the aircraft wheels and handed him over to SSS operatives for investigations to establish the airport’s vulnerability.

Officers at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport Police Command declined to comment on the matter.

A public commentator and one time top shot at the Lagos Airport said stowaway is not new to Nigeria. He said there was a similar experience of a teenager who was brought back from Amsterdam in the 1990s. He is growing up today at MMIA as tout. There was another incident in the early 1920s.

He said FAAN is expected to conduct background checks on the staff working at the airport security controlled areas and have airport security fence in addition to Perimeter fence. But what evidence do we have that adequate background checks are done on staff. Today, no Nigeria airport has security.

http://thenationonlineng.net/new/unkempt-benin-airport-provides-cover-for-stowaway-lad
 Author:Kelvin Osa Okunbor, Lagos and Osagie Otabor
Source: The Nation

Monday, August 19, 2013

AMCON Appoints New MD for Aero Contractors, Takes Controlling Stake




The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) has confirmed that it has appointed a new managing director and chairman for Aero Contractors and has also taken a controlling stake of 60 per cent in the company.

The Managing Director of AMCON, Mr. Mustafa Chike-Obi, confirmed this to THISDAY Sunday, where he disclosed that the agency had taken about 60 per cent stakes in the airline, while the original owners now have 40 per cent.

He said the newly appointed managing director of Aero was an experienced Scottish man and a British Airways veteran with experience working for many other international airlines.
Chike-Obi also said AMCON had appointed a new chairman for the company, who was a director in AMCON.

“There is nothing new about AMCON take-over of the management of Aero. That has been in the works since  six months ago. AMCON has 60 per cent control stake and the original owners have 40 per cent. We have appointed a new managing director, an experienced Scottish, a British Airways veteran and a new chairman who is a director in AMCON,” Chike-Obi said.

In December last year, AMCON had carried out the restructuring of Aero which forced the then Managing Director, Mr. Akin George, to resign his appointment and for some months now, AMCON had been involved in the running of Aero after it took over some of its debts running into billions of naira from banks.

A new Managing Director, Mr Obaro Ibru, who obviously represented the original owners of the company, was then appointed but with the latest change of batons, AMCON was poised to take the full control of the airline with the aim for rejuvenating it with the acquisition of more aircraft to make the airline, which hitherto dominated Nigeria’s domestic air travel, more competitive.

After the appointment of Ibru, AMCON had directed the airline to restructure its operations to become nimble, smarter and more profitable as Chike-Obi disclosed then that the agency had reached a restructuring agreement “which we believe will make the company better and for the good of all Nigerians.”

Since the airline’s financial problems started, it has lost its market share to other airlines, although technically it is still a strong airline to contend with.

http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/amcon-appoints-new-md-for-aero-contractors-takes-controlling-stake
Author:Chinedu Eze
Culled from Thisday