The
United States federal aviation administration has given Nigerian
airlines a 65-day ultimatum to resolve specified security issues or risk
being barred from flying to its country.
A team of US FAA
officials who recently carried out an audit for the renewal of Nigeria’s
category one safety status gave the ultimatum on August 24.
The US FAA periodically check foreign airports with which it has bilateral agreements to ensure they meet set standards.
The
checks include having effective and efficient aviation regulations,
operational state civil aviation systems and safety oversight functions
and technical personnel qualification and training.
Others
include the provision of technical guidance, tools, provision of
safety-critical information, licensing, certification, authorisation and
approval obligations.
John Ojikutu, member of aviation industry
think tank, Aviation Round Table (ART) and CEO of Centurion Securities,
told BusinessDay that he doubts if Nigeria can attain the category one
safety status without having its major airports certified.
Ojikutu
said airport certification is compliant to the Nigeria Civil Aviation
Regulations (NCAR) Part 12.6.4, which carries obligations on the
operator to continuously maintain standards and competence in operation
and ensuring availability of skilled manpower in sufficient numbers, for
the periodic maintenance of the facilities and the system.
“Many
stakeholders would probably be asking; what is the necessity for the
certification when the industry was already classified category one?” he
said.
“What many do not know, however, is that the
classification of Nigeria as Category one, was meant only for the NCAA
Regulations and oversight competence, the way university academic
programs are rated or accredited by the Nigeria Universities Commission
(NUC).
“Unfortunately, the NCAA is like a university that has
been long accredited but has not been able to graduate a student. The
NCAA, in spite of its category one status classification in 2010 and
even today in 2017 after its reclassification, has not been able to give
certification to a single airport among the over 28 federal and state
airports in the country.”
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