According to a Punch report, the Federal Government believe
that private jets in Nigeria are being used not only to smuggle money out of
the country, but also to smuggle wanted criminals out of the country. See the
report below.
The Federal
Government on Sunday said illegal consignments and cash in local and foreign
currencies were being smuggled on daily basis in and out of the country aboard
private jets.
It also said some
persons that securities agencies had declared wanted were being airlifted out
of the country aboard private and chartered jets.
As a result, it
insisted that pilots flying such jets must declare the passenger manifest
before being allowed to take off.
An aircraft manifest contains the names of all persons
aboard the plane, among other things.
The Coordinating Information and Communications Manager for
aviation parastatals, Mr. Yakubu Dati, told reporters in Lagos on Sunday that
the order for the declaration of passenger manifest was necessary to check the
abuse of the use of private and chartered jets.
He said for security reasons, especially the need to arrest
those who had constituted security threats to the country, the government would
not renege on its decision for pilots of private jets to file their manifests
before being given Air Traffic Control clearance.
Dati said security operatives had disclosed that many wanted
persons were being smuggled out of the country with private jets.
He also stated that some wanted persons were being sneaked
into the country without appropriate checks as many private jets take off from
private facilities at airports.
Dati spoke on the heels of the criticism that have trailed
the introduction of some new policy measures for the private jet sub-sector in
the country.
The government had through the National Civil Aviation
Policy, 2013 unveiled two weeks ago directed pilots of private jets to file
their manifests before obtaining ATC clearance.
It also said foreign registered private jets could only
spend 15 days in the country, just as the policy also barred private jet owners
from carrying friends and business associates.
Aviation stakeholders as well as the Action Congress of
Nigeria had, however, severely criticised the policy, saying most of its
provisions were not obtainable in any other part of the world.
An aviation expert and former Military Commandant, Murtala
Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, Group Captain John Ojikutu, said the
demand for passengers’ manifest on private aircraft could only be done by the
State Security Services.
“The need for passengers’
manifest on private aircraft, if required, can only be the responsibility of
the State Security Services, and in the case of private aircraft on
international flight, the Nigerian Immigration Service,” Ojikutu said
But Dati insisted that what the government wanted to do was
to monitor the operations of unscheduled flights as well as their manifests due
to the current security situation in the country.
According to him, charter services by private jets have
become a lucrative business in the country and 80 per cent of the private jets
have private licences, but carry out commercial operations.
This, he said, constituted safety challenges because
aircraft with private licences were not being subjected to compulsory
maintenance checks as those with commercial licences were made to do by the
regulatory body, the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority.
He also regretted that about 80 per cent of the 150 private
jets operating in the country were registered overseas; a situation he said
exempted them from paying taxes and five per cent charges to the NCAA.
Dati said, “So, when you collate what government agencies
lose by the illegal operations of these aircraft, it amounts to over N25bn in a
year. And I can authoritatively tell you that it is now a lucrative business
that businessmen bring in aircraft to operate as private jets, while they are
actually used for commercial purposes.
“So, it makes nonsense of those charter operators who follow
the laid down processes and whose business has now been taken away by the
illegal private operators.”
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