Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos.
(The Nation)
(The Nation)
The Minister of State for Aviation, Capt. Hadi Sirika, has assured unions in the aviation industry that the proposed concessioning of the four airports will not lead to job losses.
Sirika
gave the assurance at a meeting with the Air Transport Senior Staff
Services of Nigeria (ATSSSAN) and the National Union of Air Transport
Employees (NUATE) in Lagos.
The
Federal Government has indicated its interest to concession the Lagos,
Abuja, Kano and Port Harcourt Airports, toward increasing their capacity
and efficiency.
Sirika disclosed that this was
the first phase, noting that all the 22 airports owned by the Federal
Government would be concessioned at the end of the second phase.
He
said the meeting was to give the unions the opportunity to become
members of the Concession Project Delivery Committee and enable them
make inputs to better the process.
According to
him, the government’s resolve to concession the airports is aimed at
ensuring the establishment and sustenance of world-class standards in
infrastructure development and service delivery.
He
assured the unions that concession was not tantamount to privatisation
or outright sale, explaining that the facilities being concessioned
remained the properties of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria
(FAAN) and Nigeria.
The minister said: “You see government has no plans whatsoever to sell national assets so it is sheer misconception.
“The
truth is that government does not have money to invest and even if it
could, with the sheer bureaucracy it could take 10 years and Nigerians
are tired of what is on ground and want something new.”
He
noted that private investors could provide funding for construction of
world-class terminals in Nigeria under the build, operate and transfer
process which would be beneficial to the country in the near future.
“The
vision of the government is engage all stakeholders and people who have
a stake in what we are doing, especially on the concessioning of our
airports and other things we intend to do,” Sirika said.
He
also said two committees had been inaugurated to mid-wife the process,
stressing that there would be continuous engagement of stakeholders
toward ensuring what was best for the country.
The President of ATSSSAN, Mr Benjamin Okewu,
who spoke on behalf of the unions, noted that the unions were not in
agreement with the concession of the revenue generating airports.
Okewu,
however, agreed that concession done in other climes had resulted to
increased revenue, building of infrastructure and other developments.
He
also said the unions would meet to deliberate on their membership of
the Project Delivery Committee which was extended to them by the
minister and thanked him for the gesture.
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