Abuja Airport:
Beyond a temporary
closure ON APRIL 10, 20179:03 AMIN VIEWPOINT COMMENTS EVEN before its temporary
closure for rehabilitation on March 8, 2017, the Nnamdi Azikiwe International
Airport, Abuja, had always struck me as a facility permanently under
construction or endlessly undergoing repairs. Each time I drive into the
airport and look to my right at a restricted corridor, I wonder when the gauzy
veil of workers’ shade concealing scaffolds in a construction site would be
dismantled, signifying the end of the construction work and the birth of
perhaps a fully built and functional international airport. Not to mention the
scraggly landscape of its parking lot as you enter through a sloppy diversion
to your left, and other rough patches scattered across the facility, unlike
what one sees in similar airports in other countries. So it is understandable
if its closure signifies the decision of President Muhammadu Buhari’s
government to grit its teeth and commence the process of reconstructing and
rejigging it for optimal safety, functionality and comfort. And I needn’t
invite you to see some of its conveniences, compared with what obtains with
similar facilities in other countries, to appreciate what I mean by comfort.
The airport is a symbolic door to our country, and a mirror thereof. Visitors
to our country could judge its general state by how functional, clean and safe
they find it. Considering how closely our country’s image is linked to it, no
reasonable expense of time and funds should be spared to ensure that it
reflects all these attributes, including of course the period of closure and
the N5.8 billion estimated for the rehabilitation. We only need to ensure that
we get the best value for the time and money spent. More importantly, this
temporary closure has to do with the runway, which is also billed for
expansion. Like the control tower, the runway should be among the most reliable
features of any airport where the safety of passengers and the aircraft that
convey them is of primary interest. And that of the Abuja airport seemed to
have degenerated into a high-risk runway due to poor maintenance. Until the temporary
closure, maintenance of the runway had taken place only at night, which could
pose risks to passengers and aircraft for a facility that accommodates night
flights. And though constructed over thirty years ago, the runway had witnessed
no major repair or the mandatory rehabilitation to which it should have been
subjected after twenty years. We should recall how the poor maintenance culture
in our power sector lasting about the same thirty-year period resulted in
several complications from which our country, now facing serious power problems
that sum up to perennially inadequate power, has yet to extricate itself.
Incidentally, I was sceptical about the reliability of the promise to
reopen the airport for normal business after six weeks, on April 19, 2017,
until Hadi Sirika, the Minister of State for Aviation, vowed to resign if that
did not happen, and so put his job and reputation on the line to lend
credibility to the pledge. Moreover, I thought the plan to close down the
airport and use the Kaduna airport in its stead could be a ploy by some vested
interests to supplant it with the latter after the upgrade that would
inevitably precede its use for the same aviation services. This fear was
reinforced by the Nigerian Society of Engineers, NSE, insisting that the
airport could be rehabilitated while still in use. But it has been allayed by
the evidence of ongoing work at the Abuja airport, and the realisation that any
uplift the Kaduna airport receives to enable its utilisation for the same
aviation services for the six weeks can be beneficial in the long term, besides
the immediate gains during the period of closure. It means, for instance, that
international flights may be diverted to the Kaduna airport during emergencies,
with the certainty that its facilities can handle such as it has proven by
accommodating international flights in relief of the Abuja airport. And with
the planned construction of a second runway at the Abuja airport, it means
either runway can be rehabilitated in the future without necessitating a
closure of the entire facility. I was also concerned about the
safety of travelling the road from Kaduna to Abuja and the pressure of the
logistics for prospective and disembarked air passengers plying that route,
given the general insecurity in our country and the unpredictable crime rate.
But the authorities seem to have handled that aspect well, with the facelift
given to the road and the provision of vehicles to convey air passengers
between the Abuja and Kaduna airports under tight security. Of course, one
cannot ignore the reservations of the international airlines that have chosen
not to patronise the Kaduna airport. But since Ethiopian Airlines – with
similar aircraft to those of the other airlines and relying on the same
aviation technology they would normally utilise – has successfully landed and
taken off from the Kaduna airport, one wonders why any other airline couldn’t
do the same. Ms. Firiehiwot Mekonnen, the airline’s Traffic and Sales Manager,
recently told the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN, that it had operated 28 flights,
airlifting 4,500 passengers, from the airport from March 8 to April 4, 2017.
Isn’t this sufficient proof that the airport is not to blame for the hesitation
of those other international airlines to utilise it under the present
circumstances? I had similar reservations when the British authorities proposed
dismantling the old Wembley Stadium and constructing a new sporting complex in
its place. But with the more grand and functional edifice erected in place of
the old stadium, no one doubts that the British authorities did well to follow
through with that decision. And like Wembley after it was rebuilt, the Nnamdi
Azikiwe International Airport should turn out better in the interest of all
stakeholders after its rehabilitation, if our government keeps its promise to
do the right thing. Mr. Ikeogu Oke, a public affairs analyst, wrote
from Lagos


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