Nigeria to have a national carrier before end of 2017 – Hadi Sirika

The Minister of  Aviation, Hadi Sirika, has said that the country will have a very viable national airline before the end of 2017. He made this known

Racism: Lagos State govt defends Chinese restaurant
Shun Dabiri-Erewa’s warning against US travel – Onyeama
Safety above all as Emirates operates first flight by fully vaccinated frontline teams

The Minister of  Aviation, Hadi Sirika, has said that the country will have a very viable national airline before the end of 2017. He made this known while speaking to journalists in Abuja recently. Sirika said the project would be private sector driven, and that the federal government may only own 3 per cent of the airline.
“When we came in, we were very clear on our targets and goals and what we set out to achieve, and we did say that Nigeria does need a national airline.
“The national airline will be one that the government will have no hand in; normally it can have three percent.
“It will be private sector-led, private sector-driven. Except with the Ethiopian airline, it has been proven that government doesn’t do well with this kind of venture.
“We are going to have a national carrier; it is on course and because it is a PPP thing it has to go through IC and C, and also has to follow all the due process. So it is time-consuming but I hope very soon before the end of the year we will have a very strong viable national airline”, he said.

He said the carrier was necessary, considering the size of the market available in west and central Africa, equivalent to that of the US and Europe.
“For me, if any airline will have the capacity to deploy several aircraft with seamless operation, non disruptive, provide the service, go the long haul, take advantage and give other international airlines a run for their money, we don’t need to get involved; it is because there is none.
“The Nigerian Airways used to do all of these but in the wisdom of the then government they liberalised the sector, because of the absence of Nigeria’s capacity most of these airlines will come and leave as fast as they came in. But we are addressing all of these.
“We are going to establish this national carrier and it will give good service. This is the solution because Nigeria has the market, we are 180 million, we are sitting in West Africa and in the West African market we are 450 million and Nigeria is the major player.
“If you add the Central Africa, which is the Central belt, we are 600 million people, which is equivalent to the US market and also equal to the European market,” he added
Nigeria’s previous national carrier was the Nigeria Airways, but it ceased operations in 2003.