Topic: N255m car scandal: Airlines stop payment of charges  (Read 1937 times)

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N255m car scandal: Airlines stop payment of charges
« on: November 04, 2013, 09:42:11 AM »

Oduah

Domestic airlines have announced that they will no longer remit charges to aviation agencies until the sector is rid of corruption.

The carriers, under the aegis of the Airline Operators of Nigeria, said the decision took effect from November 1, 2013.

In a statement on Sunday, the spokesman of the group, Alhaji Mohammed Tukur, complained that heavy charges were being imposed on the airline operators by the aviation agencies.

He added that despite this, there was a lot of corruption in the system, citing the latest armoured car scandal involving the Minister of Aviation, Ms. Stella Oduah.

Tukur said, “Due to the ongoing crisis, we have resolved to stop all remittances payable to the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, the Nigeria Airspace Management Agency, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria and other relevant aviation bodies, as the numerous charges have the potential to cripple our operations.

“This will continue pending the time they reform or come clean on the taxes and charges they have collected, which ran into several billions of naira in a couple of years. They also need a reform to comply with the global practices and standards.

“The suspension of payment of taxes and charges took effect from November 1, 2013, and we call on the Federal Government and all concerned to set up an investigative panel to resolve these anomalies.”

The aviation industry has  lately been embroiled in controversy over the propriety of new tariffs imposed by the NCAA on non-scheduled commercial airline operators among other charges that have made it difficult for them to cope.

Tukur added that the airlines were in dire straits occasioned by the imposition of security charges, landing and parking charges, remittance of five per cent taxes on every ticket sold, fuel tax, multiple navigational charges, airport taxes, and expensive office spaces, among others.

The carriers expressed disappointment with the obsolete infrastructure at the nation’s airports and the malfunctioning navigational tools, which they said had contributed to numerous crashes in Nigeria.

Tukur said the association was studying the involvement of two of its members in the reported bulletproof car scandal, noting that they might be sanctioned if found culpable.

Source: Punch

US, UK explain silence on Oduah scam
« Reply #1 on: November 04, 2013, 09:43:00 AM »
United States and the United Kingdom have refused to dabble in the N255m bulletproof cars scandal rocking the aviation sector.

The two countries said they would not comment on it because it was a domestic issue of Nigeria.

The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority reportedly bought the two bulletproof cars for the Minister of Aviation, Ms. Stella Oduah.

This has drawn widespread criticisms across the country.

But the two superpowers (US and UK), who have been in the forefront of fighting corruption in governance,  refused to comment on the saga.

Inquiry made to the UK High Commission showed that the country was not willing to involve itself in the issue.

“There is no UK angle to the questions you are asking.  We cannot make any comment about it”, the Communication Manager (Press & Public Affairs Unit) of the British Deputy High Commission, Mr. Wale Adebajo said in a statement to Sunday Punch.

The US view was not any different.

The Information Officer, US Embassy, Abuja, Rhonda Ferguson-Augustus, said her country had nothing to say about the alleged scam.

In her response she said, “Thank you for your inquiry; The U.S. Government does not comment on internal Nigerian affairs”.

Oduah on Thursday denied that the NCAA bought the two bulletproof cars for her use.

She stated that the agency bought the cars for its own operations in line with the rising profile of Nigeria as an ICAO member.

 

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