Category: Business

  • I ‘ll protect capital market, says Dangote

    I ‘ll protect capital market, says Dangote

    Alhaji Aliko Dangote has said he would use his tenure at the helms of affairs at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) to protect the entire capital market.

    Addressing members at the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Exchange at the weekend, Dangote, who is chairing his first general meeting after the Court of Appeals restored his election as president of the NSE, said the council of the Exchange under his leadership would devote its attention to promoting interests of the market.

    According to him, the new NSE provides a vehicle for long-term savings and borrowing, and hence, efficient use of financial resources.

    He noted that the market presents incredible opportunity for investors’ pointing out that as the reforms at the NSE continue, the market will be well on its way to recovering its vibrancy and regaining investor confidence by the end of the year.

    “The Exchange will intensify advocacy efforts around public policy formulation that affects investors, listed companies, the broker-dealer community, and other stakeholders in the capital market at large. Increased collaboration with relevant government agencies will facilitate alignment between the needs of the capital market and existing and future policy that can propel market growth, especially in terms of local institutional participation and prospective issuer incentives,” Dangote said.

    He outlined that the NSE would work to broaden local participation in the capital market to create a base for stable and steady market.

    According to him, as the pressure mounts for faster and deeper reforms, liquidity and local investor participation remain key areas of focus.

    He said: “With foreign investors carrying the market, volatility is a lingering concern. Despite the relatively low prices of shares, lack of local investor participation continues to impede market recovery.

    “The Exchange will embark on a massive investor education effort designed to increase financial literacy among retail investors and engage brokerage firms to pick up and improve the advisory services arms of their businesses, to align with international best practices.”

    He added that the NSE would support efforts to achieve full dematerialisation of share certificates as well as electronic allotment of new capital issues by engaging all relevant stakeholders in the realisation of these initiatives.

    Meanwhile, Dangote offered himself for re-election and was re-elected at the meeting. Seven other institutional members including Partnership Investment Company Limited, Reward Investments & Services Limited, WSTC Financial Services Limited, Apt Securities and Funds Limited, City-Code Trust & Investment Limited, ICON Stockbrokers Limited and Stanbic IBTC Stockbrokers were also re-elected.

    Seven persons that were appointed to the council by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) exited the council. These included Mr. Emmanuel Ikazoboh; Mrs. Yemisi Ayeni; Mr. Abubakar Mahmoud, SAN; Mr. Bimbo Ogunbanjo; Mr. Bismarck Rewane; Mrs. Dorothy Ufot, SAN and Mr. Hassan Usman.

    Alhaji Bello Maccido and Katsina State Investment & Property Development Company Limited who were co-opted onto the Council in March 2009 had ceased to be members of council in April 2012. Mallam Ballama Manu, the interim head of council appointed by SEC, had also tendered his resignation on July 25, 2012, effective on that date. Mr. Nsa Harrison tendered his resignation on August 2, 2012 and it took effect at the general meeting. Dr. Oba Otudeko retired as an ex-officio member of the council and was not eligible for re-election.

    Audited report and accounts of the NSE for the year ended December 31, 2011 showed a deficit of N358.7 million in 2011 as against surplus of N357.95 million. Gross fees had dropped from N4.01 billion to N3.17 billion while gross income reduced from N4.80 billion to N3.99 billion. Total assets declined to N14.91 billion as against N15.71 billion.

  • Utomi seeks blueprint for real sector’s growth

    THE Federal Government has been urged to design a blue print to enable the manufacturing sector to contribute significantly to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and enhance the entrepreneurial base for industrialisation.

    At the 50th Anniversary Lecture and book presentation of Vitafoam Nigeria Plc in Lagos, a member of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, Prof Pat Utomi, argued that Nigeria cannot claim to have an economy when the manufacturing sector contributes only four per cent of the GDP.

    In a lecture entitled: Strategic policy options for Nigeria’s industrial growth, explained that Nigeria, which is growing by six to seven per cent annually, has the capacity to grow by 16-17 per cent without any challenge. He lamented that factors, such as industrial policy failure, declining institutions and lack of human capital development, among others, remained the bane of industrial growth.

    The manufacturing sector, he noted, plays strategic roles in every economy, as it remains the engine of economic growth, adding that sustainable development can only be achieved if resources are efficiently mobilised and transformed into productive activities that engender growth and generate employment.

    “For the country to move forward, the manufacturing sector need to account for a significant percentage of output of about 35 per cent but currently, we are less than three per cent of GDP in Nigeria whereas Nigeria has the capacity of growing at 16 to 17 per cent per annum without any challenge because we have the ingredients but how do we offer leadership to take us where we are going.

    “Our economic policies, our human capital, entrepreneurship, leadership, institutions and access to capital are not sufficient enough to make us competitive and advance,” he said.

    The expert added that when the sector is revived, it would help to actualise a long-term strategic development plan that would stimulate economic growth and reposition the country onto a path of sustainable economic growth and rapid development.

    He commended the management of Vitafoam for its doggedness and commitment, adding that the company has helped to develop entrepreneurship in the country.

    Earlier, the Chairman of the company, Mr Samuel Bolarinde, said the success recorded by the company was as a result of commitment, dedication and loyalty of the workers.

  • NCC Commissioner queried over false allegations

    NCC Commissioner queried over false allegations

    The Minister of Communications Technology, Mrs. Omobola Johnson has queried an Executive Commissioner in the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) for levelling unsubstantiated allegations against the Ministry of Communications Technology and the NCC, The Nation, has learnt.

    The Commissioner had alleged that billions of naira were lost under the current leadership when frequency bands were allocation to two private companies without following due process.

    He was said to have made the allegations in the Presidency during discussions on the conflict between the Ministry of Police Affairs and the private firm.

    The Presidency is also said to be miffed over insinuations linked to the Commissioner in a daily newspaper, (not The Nation) that top government officials and the Presidency were indicted over waiver granted to MTS First Wireless, a company now owned by AMCON. The report alleged that the waiver was in favour of the Executive Vice Chairman of NCC, Dr. Juwah.

    Juwah described the allegation as spurious, stressing that he had nothing to do with MTS First Wireless Limited since he left in 2005.

    He blamed the allegation on those who are desperate to undo him at the Commission.

    A reliable source at the Ministry of Communications Technology said the Commissioner is suspected of masterminding the recent phony reports about frequency racketeering at the regulatory body with the intent to rubbish Juwah.

    The source said the contents of the report bore semblance to written comments by the Commissioner in his earlier submissions at a meeting in the Vice President’s office, which were circulated to several government officials, including the Minister of Communications Technology.

    He said: “When we read the newspaper reports, we found that they have quoted from the same documents circulated by the Commissioner and in few days following, the same newspaper published an indictment of the Presidency regarding the waiver to MTS”

    The source also noted that the Commissioner has made matters worse by granting several interviews to some daily newspapers and online publications, where he repeated the allegations, insisting that any disciplinary actions against him by the Board will not stand as he is a member of the board, and did not attend the meeting where such decision was taken.

    The Minister of Communication Technology is said to have constituted a disciplinary committee to interview the Commissioner with a view to giving him a fair hearing before the matter is referred to the Presidency for appropriate actions, given the fact that he is yet to prove that any fraud has been committed in the assignment for frequencies by the Commission.

  • Witness: How Finbank management manipulated N10.9b shares

    ALagos High Court, Ikeja, presided over by Justice Lateefa Okunnu, was yesterday told how the former management of Finbank Plc, led by Mr. Okey Nwosu, manipulated the bank’s shares through several companies created by the management.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), had charged Okey Nwosu and three others for alleged theft of N10.9billion belonging to the Bank.

    Nwosu is standing trial alongside Dayo Famoroti, Danjuma Ocholi and Mrs. Agnes Ebubedike, all former directors of the bank between September, 2006 and November 2007.

    At the resumed trial of Nwosu, the witness, Mr. Anafi Buba Mohammed, who is a law enforcement officer incharge of compliance and Enforcement in the EFCC, told the court while being led in evidence by counsel to the EFCC, Rotimi Jacobs(SAN), that the bank’s money was used to secure the shares through two stock broking firms and some companies known as Special Purpose Vehicles(SPVs).

    He gave the names of the stockbroking firms as Springboard Trust, Investment Limited and Integrated Limited .

  • Okada accounts for 25%  of crimes in Lagos

    Okada accounts for 25% of crimes in Lagos

    About 25 per cent of crimes committed in State were aided by commercial motorcycle operators otherwise called okada riders.

    The Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Ade Ipaiye, stated this in Lagos at a stakeholders’ forum on the new traffic law organised for local government officials.

    Represented by Mr Olanrewaju Akinsola, Ipaiye said the figure was the outcome of a recent research conducted by the Ministry of Health.

    He said no responsible government would continue to watch the rising spate of robbery and havoc being caused by the reckless okada operators.

    Ipaiye said the state government was concerned about the situation, hence the enactment of the traffic law.

    According to him, this is meant to regulate the commercial motorcycle business and also to sanitise the public transportation system in the state.

    He noted that the traffic law was not entirely new, recalling that it was first enacted in 1949 to serve only about 300, 000 people.

    Ipaiye said the state’s population currently stands at 18 million.

    The commissioner stressed that the old traffic law, having been amended six times, needed to be fine-tuned in line with the current situation.

    “When a law has been amended several times, there are bound to be issues of ambiguity,” he said.

    Beside security, he said the new law would also address specifically the issues of standard, safety and sanity.

    He also spoke on the use of motorcycles by courier service companies and other dispatch riders adding only only approved motorbikes, with 200cc engines, would be allowed, just as he added that the riders must use the right number plate, attach the mail cabin and carry no passengers.

    “You will also apply to the commissioner for a permit,” he said.

    The commissioner explained that the 200cc engine was approved based on the recommendation of experts that it is the minimum engine capacity for commuting.

    Although he said that the state government did not outlaw the operation of commercial motorcycles, he warned that the business must be done in accordance with the law.

    Ipaiye also said that no branding of commercial vehicles operating in the state would be allowed outside the approved state colour.

    Rearing of animals on the road, hawking in traffic, begging and washing of vehicles is now forbidden, he said.

    Selling of alcoholic drinks and herbal concortion would no longer be allowed within 100 metres of any bus stops and motor parks, the commissioner said.

     

  • Lagos to establish software institute

    Determined to tap into the enormous potential in the Information Communication Technology (ICT) industry, the Lagos State government is to establish a software institute to position the state as an ICT hub.

    Mr Adebiyi Fatai Mabadeje, Commissioner for Science & Technology, who disclosed this in Lagos, said establishing the institute is a “concept which the state government is looking into” in line with the government’s desire to explore other means of promoting economic development.

    According to him, the “concept” is being considered “at a more encompassing level, beginning from innovation to incubation. We are focusing on the biggest industry which is mobile. We are looking at how the state can tap into it and chanelling energy into it.”

    He said the state government placed high premium on ICT training, thus underscoring regular training of personnel of the state in the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) beginning from basic to knowledge to engineering. He disclosed that the state trains 600 teachers every year on ICT tree, an international standard training recognised globally.

    Mabadeje listed other areas where the state has deployed ICT to include security, through toll-free “767” and “112” emergency lines, revenue collection (ETCC), Vehicle Registration (Autoreg), Health Management Information System (HMIS), Electronic Document Management System (registry computerisation), general personnel administration (oracle data base) and many more.

    He added that the government through the Ministry of Science and Technology has an ICT vision to improve the quality of education in institutions of learning and improve access to information for various research activities.

    The e-learning Centre was upgraded from the then Lagos City Library built in 1964. It embodies a state-of-the-art ICT learning environment utilising the latest electronic and digital technology.

    The structure consists of four floors. The ground floor consists of the reception area, Information Centre and the interactive Children’s Library for kids between five and 11 years.

    On the first floor, there is an e-library which has over one million electronic books, Book Library, and training rooms with multimedia facilities.

    The Pro-metric or Online Testing Centre is on the second floor, for those who want to write professional examinations while the third floor has the Exhibition Hall, the Herbarium and the Video Conference Centre

  • NACCIMA blames govt for economic woes

    NACCIMA blames govt for economic woes

    The Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), the umbrella organisation for the Organised Private Sector (OPS) has said the Federal Government was responsible for most of the challenges facing the manufacturing sector. The association blamed the government for the economic woes the country is currently facing.

    Its President, Dr. Ademola Ajayi, said the government has not been able to provide the enabling environment that would encourage productive development, adding that without adequate infrastructure and access to funds, creation of jobs which is one of the priority areas would not be achieved.

    Ajayi described emerging challenges to include rising insecurity, especially the Boko Haram insurgency and the new electricity tariff introduced by the Power Holding Company of Nigeria and corruption.

    He said the state of insecurity has reached an alarming stage that serious and concerted efforts must be made to provide solutions, adding that a proactive approach to security issues would guarantee a peaceful polity in which businesses would thrive and investors would be encouraged to come and invest.

    He urged the citizenry to be security conscious, adding government should embrace technology in providing security.

    “The time is virtually over for a security system that depends solely on men clutching guns and looking around. In advanced countries, including Israel and the Us, technology provides the tool for security agents to work with. It is also important for all of us to be security conscious,” he stated.

    Ajayi, also said the recent increase in electricity tariff should be revisited.

    The NACCIMA boss decried the discrepancies, querying the parameters used in determining who the rich and the poor were, especially where they were lumped together in different social environment.

    “For instance, an average man who happened to have secured a landed property in Ikoyi years back and built his house there among the rich, would the new tariff be fair to him? he queried.

    He said although NACCIMA is not opposed to the new tariff, what needs to be done, he stated, is for PHCN to have floated a six-month pilot operating scheme for the new structure.

     

  • Aviation union flays automation of revenue collection

    Aviation union flays automation of revenue collection

    National President, National Union of Air Transport Employees ( NUATE), Comrade Safiyanu Mohammed has said extortion, failure to meet extant business practices, double taxation, are part of the reasons the union is opposed to the proposed implementation of automation in revenue collection for aviation agencies.

    The Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Adaeze Oduah, gave the directive on automation revenue collection last month.

    However, the NUATE boss urged the minister against any attempt to implement the new revenue collection regime, which he argued is worse than previous attempts to contract revenue collection to private firms, including the Automated Operations Management System ( AOMS), handled by Maevis Limited.

    He said the union took the position following the failure of government to convince its leadership on the rationale for contracting revenue automation and collection to outsiders in the industry, despite the in house capacity in the agencies.

    The affected agencies are the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority ( NCAA), Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria ( FAAN), Nigeria Airspace Management Agency ( NAMA), Nigeria College of Aviation Technology ( NCAT) and the Accident Investigation Bureau ( AIB), which has since been isolated due to protest.

    Safiyanu, said thet union is not entirely opposed to every component of revenue automation in the agencies, if it is meant to block areas of revenue leakages .

    He said : ’’The blocking of this leakages should not result in other leakages elsewhere whereby some people will be raking the revenues into their pockets.’’

    He cited the example of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) , which is already collecting revenue in the form of over-flyers paid into the bank on behalf of Nigeria Airspace Management Agency ( NAMA), which attracts 1.55 per cent .

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Workers lament closure of 850 firms

    Workers in the chemical and non-metallic products industry have blamed the poor state of the economy for the closure of 850 companies in the sector.

    National President of the workers under the aegis of the National Union of Chemical, Footwear, Rubber, Leather and Non-Metallic Products Employees (NUCFRLANMPE), Comrade Boniface Isok, said more than 850 manufacturing companies closed shop, while some are now operating below production capacity.

    “The few factories that are in operation find it difficult to sustain production as the Federal Government allowed importation of all kinds of goods, thereby turning the country into a dumping ground. The adverse effect of this action is rendering the masses jobless and at the same time, boosting the economy of other countries by creating employment opportunities in those countries.”

    Isok, who spoke in Uyo at the unions delegates conference, last week, said government’s inconsistent policies have continued to hurt the economy, adding that the manufacturing sector contributes less than four per cent to the GDP compared to other countries, such as China that contributes over 15 per cent.

    He said the government should drive employment in the country, as the unemployment rate is high. He called for the abolition of contract labour and casualisation because it is modern day slavery.

    Isok appealed to the Boundary Commission to resolve all boundary disputes, saying hundreds of lives wasted on such issues were uncalled for.

    According to him, it has become necessary to draw the attention of the Federal Government to call on the commission to live up to its responsibility.

    Isok thanked the Governor of Akwa Ibom State, Dr. Godswill Akpabio on his effort at ensuring that normalcy returned to Ariam in Abia State and Esa Ikwen, Ikot Okim and Abama in Akwa Ibom State.

     

  • ‘Dana crash still a nightmare for me’

    ‘Dana crash still a nightmare for me’

    In the last few months, unfolding events in the Nigerian aviation sector have come under public scrutiny following the tragic Dana Air plane crash of June 3, 2012 and the controversies surrounding how over 160 lives were lost that dark Sunday. In this interview with our Abuja Bureau Chief, Yomi Odunuga, State House Correspondent, Vincent Ikuomola and Reporter, Olugbenga Adanikin, the Minister of Aviation, Princess Stella Oduah, speaks on the efforts being made to reposition the sector, improve on safety and other sundry matters. Excerpts:  

    What’s your reaction to media report that the Arik Air management allegedly has a list of some Nigerians who have been blacklisted and barred from boarding any of its aircraft including the allegations that those on the list were tagged as security risk to other passengers?

    I don’t want to answer that question. I found it, first of all, difficult to believe and I don’t want to believe that Arik did that. I also don’t want to believe that Arik will be that irresponsible to have said that the Chief Executive of an Aviation Agency has been declared persona-non-grata. I don’t believe it. I am still waiting to see it in black and white from them. I’m still waiting to see the chief executive or the public being restricted from travelling on board Arik. I don’t want to say much on that.

    The jury is still out on whether it was right for your ministry to clear Dana to fly when investigations into the June 3 crash are inconclusive. You have been quoted as saying that Dana must meet certain requirements before they can fly, how far have they met those said obligations?

    We are still working on it. We are not fully ready for them and they are not fully ready to commence work. Again everything Aviation has standard, processes and procedure and you can’t jump either. Everything must go in sequence so we are working on it. Whenever they are ready and certified okay they will fly.

    Could you tell us some of those requirements that must be met by Dana?

    It’s quite rigorous but there aircraft must be airworthy which means we have to certify the engines and, of course, you know that some of those aircraft have not flown for quite some time. So, we need to recertify their readiness to fly, check their manual and their personnel. So many things will have to be rechecked and certified. It’s a process that, again, you can’t jump. It’s very rigorous but we are on track. As soon as we are done, they would fly. It is not a primitive action; it’s a safety process and a global practice.

    The crash of Dana was unfortunate and tragic. In moving forward, what lessons should the nation take away from the incident?

    One of the major lessons is that we recognise we are on track in enhancing the regulatory agencies’ performance; in reviewing policies on the regulatory agency; in ensuring that we have in place recertification process that is of global standard. But, most importantly, the checks and balances within the system have been re-enhanced to the extent that we do not leave any loophole. You know in aviation, safety is not a destination it is a process. So wherever you have aviation, everything you do will dovetail towards accomplishing that maximum safety. The lesson we learnt is not complete because the full report is not yet out but the fact is safety must remain priority to us and we are on track like I said.

    Do you think we have technical personnel to handle some of these issues?

    We do have even if we do have lapses to some extent. But we need to have more than what we have now and that is why we are prioritising our capacity building. Not just that but we must have capable hands in excess. It is about human being so you must have not just those who have the capacity to do the job but should one not be in position to work, you have something to fall back on. But we are going further, we are working with international organisations like the manufacturers of the aircraft so that they can lend us their expertise and also work with us on aircraft re-certification which is an annual thing for us. We are also working with them to make sure we domesticate the maintenance of these aircraft in Nigeria and collaborate with them in training our men because the thing in aviation is that, unlike in vehicle whereby can drive a car regardless of the brand, in aviation, that you can fly Boeing 727 doesn’t mean you can fly the others. You must be aircraft-certified and so we keep in line with that and we must keep on recertifying our engineers, our pilots so they can be aircraft-rated. It’s a very tedious work but again capacity building is a continuous process.

    What’s your take on the issue of Aviation Intervention Fund because, from the way airlines continue to fold up in Nigeria, it is as if the fund is not functional?

    To start with, we met the fund when we came into office. But when we reviewed the fund, it wasn’t yielding dividend. We believe the impact wasn’t felt and we went back to Central Bank of Nigeria that we need to have a review of the intervention fund. Essentially, what we are asking is: let’s use it to the extent that we will have positive impact within the sector and they agreed with us. We are working out the criteria for airlines that will qualify and benefit from it. One of those is we should use it to professionalise the operations to ensure that airline operators are professionals. We don’t want to do father and son operation. You can invest but we must have professionals to manage it. Secondly, we want to make sure they have capacity building. That is a priority because it’s a professional industry for continuous training and retraining. It is not a favour but it’s something that must be done. But, most importantly, the access we should have for utilising the fund should be such that, knowing what we have, it should be paid directly to the manufacturers and the manufacturer should release the aircraft. It is either the operator or the ministry or those that are able to meet up the criteria will now have access to the aircraft as opposed to what we met here. Money was given and there was no aircraft. I don’t see any. So all these are what we are asking that we change the utilisation modality. So we can feel the impact and meet the purpose the money was given in the first place. We need to have new aircrafts in the system—fuel-efficient aircraft to manage and professionally for that matter. At the end, it will be a win, win for all the government, public and the banks that are lending the money.

    One would have thought that the funds were meant to help the private sector to run airlines professionally and in line with international practice since governments all over the world are not known to run businesses well. But with the way things have turned out, don’t you think government intervention would be counter-productive especially if the aircraft are put under its care?

    No, no, it’s not coming to the ministry to manage. It’s private sector that will manage it. We are going back to the operations table to manage. However, the operation will not be as you know them because the company themselves need change. We need to change their operational modality and the concepts. Aviation airline operators and operating company is not a hubby, it’s not a part time thing. It’s a full time business. It’s a professional business which must be efficiently managed so that passengers can enjoy and you get proper return on investment. In a nutshell, we want to have airline operators that are professionalised. That is really the keyword for us. If it’s not, it makes nonsense of the whole exercise. It means government that is giving the intervention fund will not get that money back. Don’t forget, it’s actually a loan really but a very concessionary loan. So that money must be repaid. Therefore, if you are not being managed efficiently, you won’t get that money back. It means the public whose government has responsibility to take care of will not have any benefit of that intervention. I won’t want that to happen again. We have a tripartite agreement where the money goes straight to the manufacturing company. It could be Bombardier, it could be Boeing. As long as the manufacturer manufactures fuel-efficient aircraft, give us the maintenance, we will train our people to fly this aircraft, then we are fine. They will now deliver the aircraft to Nigeria. On our side in Nigeria, we would have catalogues of those operators that would have met the criteria. That would qualify them to access these aircraft. So, money doesn’t change hand. What changes hand is the aircraft which is the equipment we need to impact positively on aviation. These are the tools we need to grow the sector, the tools operations need to return this concessionary money given to them by government. That is, for us, the way it can work. At the end, you will have efficient, professional and effective airlines that are local and working for you, me and owners of the businesses.

    So does that mean those that mismanaged the funds won’t be tried or that the money will not be retrieved from them?

    I wasn’t part of that. I’m leaving that to the Central Bank and other authorities to do what they need to do. Where my beat start is where I can speak authoritatively of. I don’t want to have anything to do with that because it hasn’t impacted positively in the sector I’m asked to manage. For me to have a positive impact, this is what I need to do otherwise it won’t work. So I’m not in a position to answer what will happen to those who failed to use their intervention fund. But don’t also forget that the intervention fund was not set up for aviation really. It was set up for a different purpose. I won’t go into that because Central Bank exhaustively discussed it during the Dana crash incident.

    Buying aircraft is key but people will also be interested in infrastructures and facilities to run the airline. Is that part of your responsibility?

    It is. We are doing very well in that regard. We started with a master plan and it has been very progressive taking into cognisance the fund constraint we have. So, we started with the gateway i.e. terminal rehabilitation and from there, we are going into infrastructural development upgrade to make sure that the airports are properly certified and in line with international rules and regulations. As you know, aviation is global. You don’t have aviation standard. It is a global standard. We believe that, by the end of next year, our infrastructural upgrade will be equal to none in Africa. We strongly believe that. Again, as we are doing that, we are also doing policy review, procedural upgrade again to make sure that it all goes together towards what we call our vision for Nigeria aviation. We want to become the regional hub for commercial, not just for the region but for Africa. We also want to be regional for training. Nigeria College of Aviation Technology (NCAT) is being repositioned as I speak and the essence is to have not a world class institution but an institution that can accommodate and produce sufficient, technical people to the extent that we are able to do, one out of every five aviation technician to be of Nigerian origin. Again, our time frame is that, in the next 24 months, we should be able to accomplish that. It’s a rigorous exercise. It takes a lot of time but we are truly blessed that we have wonderful men and women who put in countless hours just to make sure that we are able to achieve this goal and I pray that God will bless them for giving out their time for a country that we all love very much. Aviation is economic driver for the nation. It is the nucleus for economic activity for every nation. So it is very crucial for national growth.

    Do we have the capacity or airport that can make Nigeria a hub as you earlier mentioned?

    What we inherited is nothing to be proud of when you talk about airport terminal but we are not that bad. It’s bad because it does not represent who we are as a people. It doesn’t represent our aspiration as people so we have done the rehabilitation and reconstruction of the existing ones. Clearly there won’t be any airport in Africa that has better facility than us. The second stage is the construction of 5 new international airports and that will be truly a representation of us as hardworking, entrepreneurial people. It’s going to be true representation of Nigerians in all ramifications because the airport is the gateway and the first impression anybody gets of you is the airport and one out of every three visitors translates to investor. So what they see on their arrival is determinant of if they will remain or leave. It is just like someone comes to your house and opens your living room.  If your house is unkempt and is dirty and smelly, it doesn’t matter the gold you have inside, the impression of you is already engraved.

    With the way the so-called influential airlines in Nigeria shut out passengers or refuse to fly for the flimsiest of excuses, don’t you think it’s high time we thought of having our national carrier?

    I agree with you. Don’t forget we started singing this song from the beginning that we must have our own national carrier—a national carrier that will be owned by all of us. We should have a carrier that will go to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and look for investors like you and I and every one of us to be investors. Core investors will have maximum of 15 per cent investment. Every other thing will be paid for by you and I. Government will not be part of this. Government has done their own part by giving approval for national carrier and by having the enabling environment. Other than that, it’s between you and I to make it work. I think we cannot as nation but have a truly national carrier. Not only that, we will also have a national flag in addition to that. It’s a matter of time but it will happen.

    How soon? Is it being worked on?

    Yes. We are waiting for the final approval then we will go to the market and everybody will buy in.

    One of the stories that really made headlines in recent time was the road trip. People will like to know whether it was necessary. Couldn’t we have invited those people? What have we gained anyway?

    My question is: how many investors have you seen? They haven’t been coming so we decided to take it to their home front and showcase to them our potentials. We eventually said to them, this is what we have available for you for your investment. See, if you want accelerated growth and you lack capacity, the only way you can get that capacity increase is when you have a merger. So you merge it and it’s an automatic growth. That’s what we want. We want accelerated growth so we went to seek for help, we went to seek for potential investors and we got a lot of quality responses. The question is why did it take us so long before we came seeking for investors? And our response was we just started, we don’t know what may have happened in the past but here we are. This is the fastest opportunity available for investors and it has worked but it hasn’t ended and we intend to do more. We want to bring in more investors because we have clusters of opportunities. Whether its infrastructures, real estate development, retail, entertainment all those. Like I said, airport is not just a garage where people go and they fly. It’s an economic centre. It’s an economic driver. It’s a place where you have economic activity. That is what we want to realise for Nigeria and reposition aviation to the extent that we will have full gains of this potential we are losing. Any potential not gained is a loss and we don’t want that.

    The Aerotropolis is one of the vision of the ministry, what is the present status and what do Nigerians stand to gain from it?

    Aerotropolis is huge. I’m sure you know it is a mega economic city, aviation city and you have the aerotropolis. It is the bigger one, the larger city. For us, our aerotropolis has larger city that is centered around the airport that is commercial. We have industrial, manufacturing then you have the value chain, the perishable. For us, it is the key to rural development. In you village, you can plant vegetable and sell it in New York which is the initiative of farm to super market. A real farmer will have access to international market and the earning will automatically change to Naira to Dollar and that itself will increase the value chain along the line where people like yourself can become entrepreneurs in different ways. It’s either in logistics, packaging, manufacturing or different things; the value-chain is huge. Apart from the fact that the farming itself will no longer be what men and women are doing, it will be what any young person can do as an entrepreneur. So you have emergence of entrepreneurs and people taking advantage of the opportunity. All these are what the aerotropolis encapsulates and its potentials. The economy of Ethiopia is based on perishables, so is Kenya, Cameroun. All of them are doing that. What are we doing? Zero. This means we are losing that potential. If we assemble phone in Nigeria and exports it to any African country or anywhere in the world, we will dominate the market because we have the skill, manpower and the market. So the essence is what we were known before as the commercial centre of Africa, aerotropolis will bring it back. On the construction of the airport, we have gotten an approval to get the loan. What we are waiting for is the final approval and get approval from the Chinese government to release the money. In all its ramifications, we closed transactions because we have agreed that they will lend us concessionary loan of 22 years with seven years’ moratorium and a 2.5 per cent. That’s free money!

    Free money, but will it be properly managed?

    Yes, why not? The construction company is not going to be Gbolade and Company Construction Limited.  It will be a world class Chinese company transacted by the NEXIM bank. They will construct it within 24 months and we believe they could do it in 18 months. We will give ourselves a longer period should they finish it on time. So now, we will have a world class airport.

    On the remodelling and rehabilitation of airports, it has been alleged that you appeared to be focused on a particular region of the country. How will you respond to that?

    They are lying and they don’t know what they are saying. They are being mischievous. There is no way that can be done. It can’t be lopsided. It’s not possible. When we came in, the first airport we chose was Kano. We did Hajj. I’m not a Muslim. I’m a Christian but the first terminals we did were hajj terminals, Kano terminal and Kaduna terminal. After that the next one we finished first was Kano terminal. Since the day the Kano international airport was built till we worked on it, nobody touched it. These are not perishable. They are there, anybody, everybody can see them. So I really don’t understand where the story was coming from. It’s sad that it is everything we like to politicize. In aviation, you can’t politicize because it’s just too global. So it’s not true at all.

    How did you get the news of the Dana Crash?

    I cried, I cried and I cried. Why? Because losing what you can’t give back is a horrible experience. And losing those innocent wonderful people was just too traumatic for me as a person. It’s still a nightmare. And I believe for all of us that witnessed it, the incident is something we will have to live with for the rest of our lives. I don’t know how we can get over that and my prayer is that God will not allow us to experience such a horrible time ever again.  But other than that, it was a black day, very very black day.

    Recently, you said the Sosoliso and Bellview report will be made ready. When should we expect it?

    Very soon, I think the process it’s at the last stage now. We will follow it up rigorously to bring out the report.

    In the next three years, where do you see the aviation sector?

    Where it is supposed to be. It ought to be at the centre, repositioned efficient professional and effective. Take its rightful position of the nucleus of the nation’s economy but, most importantly, the regional hub for training, maintenance and the first and best aerotropolis within the region.