Tag: collision

  • One dies, two survive in head-on collision

    One dies, two survive in head-on collision

    One person died yesterday while two others escaped unhurt in an auto accident opposite Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) Command, Nteje, along Awka-Onitsha Expressway, Anambra State.

    The crash, which occurred around 9 30am, involved a Toyota Camry with Registration Number: ABJ125JV, and Ford Explorer with registration number: ZBL626RL.

    According to eyewitnesses, the Camry driver lost control and crashed after crossing to the Ford Explorer lane on a single carriage way.

    He said one male adult was killed while two male adults were rescued unhurt.

    He commiserated with the deceased family, urging motorists to be observant with their environment and always pay full concentration to driving.

    He said: “A fatal road traffic crash happened opposite FRSC Command Nteje by Nteje-Awka-Onitsha Expressway.

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    “A driver identified as Chiweuba Evaristus Chidiebere with a private Toyota Camry with Registration Number: ABJ125JV, and an unidentified driver of a private Ford Explorer with registration number: ZBL626RL was involved in a fatal crash.

    “Three male adults were involved in the crash. One male adult was killed while two others were rescued unhurt.

    “FRSC rescue team from RS5.3  Nteje, rushed the victim to Chira Hospital where he was confirmed dead by the doctor and his corpse deposited at New Jerusalem mortuary Nteje.

    “The team managed traffic and ensured obstruction caused by the crash was cleared.’’

  • Agip, community on collision over MoU

    The Odede family, Irri, Isoko South Local Government Area of Delta State has given a 30-day ultimatum to the Nigeria Agip Oil Company Limited (NAOC) to execute the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) it signed on the use of their family land since 2001.

    A letter dated October 22, 2018, and signed by Simon Ngbakor on behalf of the Odede family threatened to approach the court for redress if NAOC fails to accede to their demands.

    The family also demanded the payment of N510, 000,000.00 for the use of the land being the total sum of the N30,000,000.00 yearly since 2002.

    The family, in the letter, lamented the gift of one goat and a bag of rice from NAOC, Port-Harcourt branch  yearly to the family and the community crisis in Irri which NAOC has been using as excuse not to fulfil its own part of the bargain.

    It said the land, which their progenitor left for them, form part of Odede family land and have been farming on it being their major occupation in the family, stating that sometimes in 2001, the family was approached by NAOC to use the land for flow station.

    ‘’Thereafter verbal agreement was reached with our clients and your company wherein it was agreed that the sum of N10,000,000.00 will be given to our clients annually for the use of the land.

    ‘’We were informed by our clients that one of the verbal terms of the agreement in respect of employment of members of our clients’ family and that of contracts were not also met by your company. All the attempts made to see that your company reduces the verbal agreement into writing and the need to comply with the terms proved abortive as our clients were always driven back by the security attachment in your company.

    land without the consent of  Moroko Odede and Matthew Edeki, the Head of the family and Principal member of the family  respectively, is of no effect.

     

  • Breach of agreement: Lekki Gardens, subscriber on collision path

    Breach of agreement: Lekki Gardens, subscriber on collision path

    When Mrs. Oluwafunmilayo Ogunnaike-Bello, a subscriber to one of the Lekki Gardens Estate scheme, signed the dotted lines for a three-bedroom apartment, she was confident that her dream of owning a comfortable home with ease has materialised.

    With firm commitment to the project, Ogunnaike-Bello had paid up the N20 million asking price for the apartment, exclusive of VAT/Withholding tax- paid by the Purchaser to Lekki Gardens (Vendor), leading to the signing of an agreement between the parties on September 18, 2013.  But this date seeme to have been the last happy moment for the buyer in the transaction.

    According to her, the first infraction by the Vendor is on the specified period for delivery. As contained in the agreement in Section 2.3, the Vendor shall “deliver the property in Shell-Unit specifications as listed in the first schedule not later than 14 months effective from 18/09/2013.”

    This means that by November 17, 2014, the house ought to have been delivered to the Purchaser. It however took two years and five months after the deadline before Ogunnaike-Bello could get her apartment, precisely on March 29, 2017.

    Her disappointment has been further fuelled as the Vendor, she maintained, has failed to adhere to the provisions for default / remedy as contained in the agreement. Specifically, Section 4 (i) of the agreement says that “where the Vendor defaults in the delivery of the property, it shall pay a monthly penalty fee of 0.7 percent interest on the total instalment received from the Purchaser not exceeding three months thereafter within which delivery shall be made without which the Purchaser shall determine the Agreement and all money paid by the purchaser shall be due  and payable in 12 weeks.”

    Yet, the delivery of the apartment, Block D2, Flat 5, Horizon II Extension, Lekki Gardens Estate, to the Purchaser, Ogunnaike-Bello said, has been anything but satisfactory. For instance, before she finally got the keys to the house, the Purchaser said the Vendor made her to pay N250,000 for “water connection” to the apartment. A copy of the Zenith Bank teller, number 4036118, with which the payment was made to the Vendor, dated March 28, 2017, and acknowledged by a certain Adenekan Adebola on behalf of the Vendor, was sighted by The Nation.

    The elder sibling of the Purchaser, Mr. Olarigbigbe Bello, interfaces with Lekki Gardens on behalf of his sister when she is not available. Bello told The Nation that it has not been a palatable experience dealing with the Vendor. He regretted that, after making full payments, and in spite of the several correspondence to, and meetings with, the Vendor, the situation has remained the same.

    “Imagine that the developer failed to connect the apartment to electricity; neither has the entire apartment been connected to water supply even though they collected N250,000 for this from us; this money they demanded was not in anyway contained in the original agreement. We asked them for electrical wires so we could do our connections, but they failed to supply same; only a part of the apartment has water now, like in the kitchen water is not flowing. Its such a shame of a job done,” a bitter Bello said. He added that even the spiral step fitter at the back of the building is anything but beautiful.

    He further explained that he complained to a staff of the Vendor, Mr. Sunday Adeyanju, who is the facility manager, but nothing has been done.

    When The Nation contacted Adeyanju on phone last Monday, he confirmed receiving the complaints about the apartment from Bello. He also said he had since forwarded the complaints to his line manager for further action.

    “Yes I got their complaints, and I have followed protocol by sending same to my line manager. I am awaiting further directive from my boss,” Adeyanju told The Nation in a telephone chat.

    Bello listed other defaults by the Vendor to include failure to do the electrical works in the flat; non painting of the apartment and non fitting of POP ceiling, all contained in the First Schedule which specified what the Shell Unit of the house will contain. Under the second schedule, Bello said the Vendor was in default of providing electricity in the flat; failure to connect the drainage and gutters appropriately leading to heavy flooding in the block and estate in May/June this year; and failure to provide clinic and school.

    At the onset of this development, precisely June 2017, The Nation contacted the Indigo PR, the communications and public relations consultants to Lekki Gardens, for clarification on the incident. Its Managing Director, Mr. Bolaji Abimbola, appealed for time on behalf of his client, assuring the Purchaser and her proxy that he had the assurances of his clients that the needful would be done. “Please give my clients till August 2017 ending, that is two months from now, and everything will be sorted out. My clients are very credible people and they will work on the Purchaser’s observation,” he had assured.

    However, two months after the appeal for extension, the story has remained the same, as the Vendor has not done anything to improve the apartment it collected N20 million for.

    According to Abimbola, there was delay in delivering the house to Ogunnaike_Bello due to some circumstances. He explained that the company apologised to the customer in question. “As you may be aware, the company had a crisis recently and work on all our sites was stopped for a while by the regulatory agency, but we have since returned to work and committed to deliver homes to all our customers. On this note, we would like to seek her understanding,” Abimbola explained.

    However, his position on this was carpeted by Bello. “The apartment ought to have been delivered in November 2014- a clear one year and four months before the Lekki Gardens building collapse of March 8, 2016, which the company is now trying to use as an excuse for the delay,” he said.

    On the N250, 000 fee, Abimbola explained this as the connection fee for infrastructure like water, drainage, sewage and electricity, which he said is not peculiar to the customer, but charged all apartment owners in the estate. “The fee is not extra payment and it is usually paid at the point of key collection,” he explained. Again Bello disagreed on this, claiming that such was not indicated in the agreement signed. “This is fraud and deceit; why didn’t they include this in the agreement we signed, only for them to change the goal post not in the middle of a match but at the end? So are they saying they would deliver a house with basic infrastructure like water without the payment? he asked rhetorically.

    Abimbola explained that the developer is currently working to connect  all the block of flats in the estate to electricity supply, assuring that it would be completed in a “couple of weeks.” While He explained further that the company is only responsible for the painting of the exterior of the blocks while the customers are expected to do the finishing of their unit to their taste. He said the estate was built with adequate drainage plan but the recent rising of water levels and the impact of other construction work around the area was responsible for the flooding.

    “In a nutshell, we would like to appeal to her for understanding as we would ensure that we  resolve all the issues,” Abimbola pleaded.

    For now, Ogunnaike-Bello said the option before her is to institute litigation against the Vendor, and ensure that every breach in the agreement is addressed accordingly.

  • Buruji Kashamu, Ladi Adebutu on collision course

    Buruji Kashamu, Ladi Adebutu on collision course

    Nigeria’s political history is replete with men who rose to the heights of political glory by climbing on the shoulders of godfathers. Ladi Adebutu seems to be toeing the same path, unmindful of the fate of those who had come crashing down after falling out with their godfathers.

    On his part, Ladi, a member of the House of Representatives, is banking on the vast wealth of his father, Chief Kessington Adebutu, to actualise his ambition of becoming the next governor of Ogun State. He however faces stiff opposition in the person of Senator Buruji Kashamu whose own ambition is sure to clash with those of the younger Adebutu.

    It was gathered that although they both hail from the Ijebu part of the state and both belong to the Peoples Democratic Party, neither of them is ready to sacrifice his ambition for the other.

    In the face of the massive threat posed by Kashamu, who is banking on the influence he has garnered through years of service at the grassroots, Ladi has predictably turned to his father’s wealth and political clout as his trump card towards securing his party’s ticket come 2018.

    In order not to fall foul of the party’s zoning formula, Ladi, who hails from Iperu Remo, plans to run for office from the Odogbolu Constituency. But be it as it may, political schemers in the state appear set to throw their weight behind him.

  • Army officer’s car explodes after collision with truck

    Army officer’s car explodes after collision with truck

    There was panic around Fatgbems Petrol Station on Oshodi-Apapa Expressway yesterday when a Toyota Camry saloon car exploded.

    The car belonging to an army officer, Lasisi Adeleye, went up in flames after a Mercedes Benz 1428 truck marked AKM162ZW hit it from the rear. The car had three 25-litre kegs filled with petrol in its trunk.

    It was gathered that the Camry knocked down a passerby while trying to avoid being crushed by the truck.

    The Camry, while still trying to avoid crushing the victim, was said to have somersaulted and crossed the median.

    The army officer was said to have run out of the vehicle before it hit the pedestrian walkway and exploded.

    Motorists and passersby scampered for safety.

    The truck driver, Joseph Chima, a resident of 50, Emodi Street in Olodi Apapa was said to have attempted to flee but he was caught by the army officer who took him to the police station.

    Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) officials took the injured man to the hospital in their patrol van.

    According to Assistant Corps Commander, Emmanuel Edeh, the victim was taken to New Age Hospital at Kirikiri Apapa, where it was discovered that he has a fractured ankle.

    The command’s spokesperson, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent of Police (SP), said investigations were ongoing, adding that the saloon car was “completely burnt”.

     

  • Herdsmen, farmers on fresh collision course

    Herdsmen, farmers on fresh collision course

    An imminent clash beween farmers and Fulani herdsmen may be brewing in Ido Local Government Area of Oyo State.

    Hundreds of farmers in the area have threatened a reprisal attack, if nothing is done to stop the alleged invasion of their farms by Fulani herdsmen.

    Over 400 aggrieved farmers from various villages, including Abokede, Onikanga, Mabolese, Alatori, Agbetu and Olorode, yesterday marched on Omi-Adio, a town close to Ibadan, the state capital, to protest “the recurring invasion of their farms by Fulani herdsmen”.

    They claimed they had lost their farm yields to the invasion. Led by the Secretary, Osho Forestry Reserve, Asimiyu Yusuf, the protesting farmers claimed that most of the victims were from Adedapo, Olorode, Keji, Aboke, Pelu, Alagbe, Gbagba Elewure and Areyinjetu.

    Yusuf said: “Many of us have been ruined, following the incessant invasion of our farms by the grazing cattle of these Fulani herdsmen. We have no other means of livelihood.

    “This year, some of our members were matcheted on their farms by invading Bororos; nothing seems to have been done by the authorities to checkmate them.”

    The aggrieved farmers said the armed herdsmen have also been striking at night.

    It was also alleged that the invaders, at times, raped some of the farmers’ wives.

    The protesting farmers, who complained to the police and the Department of State Security (DSS), called on the government to intervene.

    The Sardaunan Yamma and Sarkin Sasa, Alhaji Haruna Maiyasin, promised to intervene in the matter.

    Maiyasin pleaded with the farmers not to take the law into their hands as the issues would be resolved.

     

  • Fears over rising cases  of aircraft collision

    Fears over rising cases of aircraft collision

    Increasing incidents of aircraft clipping each other’s wings at aprons, taxi-ways and runways nationwide has become a source of concern to experts, most of who have warned that unless the ugly trend is nipped, air safety may be threatened, KELVIN OSA – OKUNBOR, reports.

    Experts in the aviation industry are  getting increasingly worried over the recurrence of on-the-ground incidents involving aircraft at major airport runways, taxi -ways and aprons.

    The aircraft ground collision is putting aircraft owners under pressure on account of the huge sums spent to fix damaged aircraft  at either the apron,  ramp , taxi way or runway.

    The affected airlines may have spent millions of naira on repairs arising from collision not covered by insurance. At the Lagos Airport, Arik Air, Emirates Airlines, Hak Air, First Nation Airways and other domestic carriers aircraft have been involved in ground collision with the affected airlines’ personnel and airport authority officials trading blames on the cause of such incidents.

    This has brought to the fore critical questions bordering on the implementation of safety management systems by the affected airlines as well as the regulatory authority.

    Industry watchers are asking questions on what measures are being put in place by the regulator, airport authority and airlines to deploy adequate technology and training of ground personnel to avoid such incidents.

    Some experts, including secretary of the Aviation Roundtable ( ART), Group Captain John Ojikutu ( rtd), attributed the rising incidence of ground collision of aircraft to the failure of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to implement safety recommendations by the Accident Investigation Bureau ( AIB).

    Ojikutu said unless urgent steps are taken to check the rising incidents of ground collision at the apron, taxi – way and runway, the stage is set for an avoidable accident.

    He said though airside incidents  are  bound to happen, but the relevant authorities, including the airlines, must take urgent steps to learn useful lessons to avoid recurrence.

    “The recurring incidents involving aircraft clipping each other’s wings at the apron, taxi-way and runway should be re-examined with the regulatory authority held responsible. The NCAA were doing its job of proper regulation of the industry, why should airlines be experiencing regular ground collision of their aircraft”

    According to Ojikutu, rather than taking urgent steps to address the safety challenge, airlines and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria ( FAAN) have been shifting blame.

    He said:” The recurring incidents involving aircraft clipping each other’s wings at the apron, taxi-way and runway should be re-examined with the  regulatory authority held responsible.

    If the NCAA were doing its job well, we should not be witnessing such incidents.

    The NCAA should be held responsible, that is why we are having incidents of aircraft collision on the apron.  If the NCAA were doing its job of proper regulation of the industry, why should airlines be experiencing regular ground collision of their aircraft.

    A few years ago when an Arik Air aircraft collided with a Nigerian Air Force plane in Jos Airport, the incident ended up as a blame game.

    The NCAA claims that it carries out investigations on aircraft collision, what has happened to previous investigative reports? Where are the accident reports?

    After the June, 3, 2012 DANA Air crash, the AIB issued over 150 safety recommendations, but the NCAA did not implement up to 30 per cent of the safety concerns.

    Lending his voice to the issue, the President of Association of Foreign Airlines Representatives in Nigeria (AFARN), Kingsley Nwakoma, said if the size of aprons at airports nationwide are not expanded, the industry risks more incidents at the airside.

    He said the recurring incidents could be reduced if airsides at airports are illuminated. He accused the airport authority of not doing enough to expand airside infrastructure, which he said is long overdue. He said the facilities put in place many decades ago can no longer contain the size of aircraft on the apron for either passenger or cargo operations.

    He said: “I think the authorities are not doing enough to expand apron facilities. This explains the increase in aircraft ground collision. Until urgent steps are taken, the ugly trend may continue.”

    AFRAN has, therefore, appealed to the Federal Government to begin the expansion of the cargo apron of the Murtala Mohammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos. He said  the present limited size of the apron is affecting their operations.

    Nwokoma said the expansion of the cargo apron was long overdue, after decades of its construction as its current size could not match the scale of their operations.

    He said the expansion would generate more revenue for the government, especially at this time, when the price of crude oil is crashing.

    Nwokoma said that it was becoming more difficult for wide-bodied planes to land at the airport, as a result of the inability of the government to construct a bigger apron for the airport. He urged the government to address the situation to avoid embarrassment from the international community.

    “We have an airline that brings in goods and is directed to park at the international terminal’s tarmac, instead of using the cargo terminal. This is because the cargo apron is so small and we have had issues and incidents involving cargo planes in the past.

    “That the cargo apron has not been expanded since the airport was built and inaugurated in March 1979 is an eye sore; we have been crying, calling for this expansion because safety is key here,” he said.

    Nwokoma frowned at the abandonment of  the cargo by a contractor awarded the contract for its expansion, noting that the facility would be of benefit to the nation.

    “This is one of the projects that the government must look into,” he said.

    A few weeks ago,  a Boeing 777-200LR belonging to Emirates Airline and a domestic airliner a B737-400 owned by HAK Air were involved in ground collision at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja, Lagos.

    Worried over  the incident, the  AIB deployed a team of investigators to determine the circumstances surrounding it with a view to making safety recommendations. The Emirates Airlines aircraft  marked A6-EWD, according to the spokesman of the AIB, Tunji Oketumbi, was taxiing for take-off en-route Dubai when its wing tip cut into the B737-400 HAK aircraft parked on the apron of the domestic wing of the airport.

    While the Emirates aircraft had little damage on its wing tip, the HAK Air B737 was damaged substantially.

    The Emirates flight was aborted as a result of the accident. A few weeks later, two aircraft belonging to First Nation Airways also  collided at the Murtala Muhammed Airport.  The incident occurred when one of the planes was reportedly taxiing from the runway to MMA2 to drop off passengers while the other was preparing to take off for Port-Harcourt.

    Confirming the mishap, the General Manager, Public Affairs of the NCAA, Fan Ndubuoke, said there was no casualty and the incident had been referred to the AIB for further investigation.

    However, First Nation Airways blamed officials of the FAAN for the incident. An official of the airline, Rasheed Yusuf, in a statement, said if FAAN officials were diligent the incident would have been avoided.

    The airline said: “We wish  to clarify the ground incident that occurred on Friday, July 17, 2015. Our Aircraft Registered No. 5N-FND wing tip touched the wing tip of another sister aircraft already parked at another gate. This incident was avoidable if the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria marshallers had been diligent to avoid marshalling the aircraft wrongly.”

    He went on:”We urge FAAN to retrain the marshallers as we understand that the marshallers at MMA2 are deployed by FAAN under an MOU with Bi-Courtney Aviation Services Limited, the operator of MMA2, Ikeja. It is important to emphasise that at no time was the safety of passengers at risk.

    “The regulatory authorities will also need to enhance oversight of the marshallers and their authorisation to arrest the growing incidents of aircraft damage on ground in Nigeria which is embarrassing. Besides the huge losses that First Nation and other airlines suffered as a result of avoidable ground incidents.You will recall that a similar incident involving Emirate aircraft occurred only a couple of days.”

    A few years ago, a Turkish Airline plane wings collided with that of Max Air plane which  brought in Pilgrims from Saudi Arabia.

    The Turkish Airline plane landed safely but was taxiing to stop at the apron when its wing collided with  that of Max Air.

    “The collision resulted in minor damages to both airplanes,” according to the report.

    Ndubuoke confirmed the incident. He however, said damages to the aircraft belonging to both airlines were minor and that both planes had been taken away for repairs.

    According to aviation experts, the global aircraft industry loses up to US$11 billion annually to accidents and incidents on the ground. Experts say commercial aviation, which is a multi-billion dollar industry employs high level technologies to maintain safety standards.

    Such current high level of flight safety,  experts say, has been achieved by investment in overlapping safety systems such as surface movement radar, altitude transponders and other technology with the aim of preventing a single source error leading to a reduction in safety margins.

    However, the same systems, experts say, cannot be utilised to protect the aircraft from collisions during ground operations.

    A Nigerian pilot who pleaded not to be named said: “This remains one area where single source human judgment remains unchecked, namely clearance between the aircraft structure and obstacles during aircraft maneuvers on the airport ramp and taxiways.

    “A single ground crew member usually makes decisions on safe clearance during “push- back” or a flight crew member during taxiing to and from the standard positions

    One of the difficulties in assessing implications of aircraft ground accidents is that the available data is insufficient. ”

    Experts have called on the NCAA to furnish the AIB with sufficient information to investigate the recurring trend of aircraft ground collision.

    Worried over the trend, the Nigerian Air Traffic Controllers Association ( NATCA) urged government to take a critical look at the reconstruction of the Lagos Central Taxiway, a second Abuja runway, a backup for the  Total Radar Coverage of Nigeria (TRACON ) system as well as rehabilitation of airport facilities.

    According to its president,  Victor Eyaru the taxiway has been out of use for more than six years leading to usage of Eastern taxiway whenever only Runway 18L/36R is available for landing and take-off. He said ground collusions have been recorded whenever wide bodied aircraft make use of the Eastern taxiway

    He said :”Aircraft accidents on ground have been recorded more than twice whenever wide bodied aircraft make use of the Eastern taxiway. The most recent was at 2045 UTC on the July 6, 2015 when the Emirate’s aircraft B777 flight UAE784 ran into parked Hak Airline’s aircraft on the apron when FAAN Electrical department switched off lights on the longer Runway 18R/36L for maintenance.”

    “The un-serviceability of the same Eastern Taxiway has prevented aircraft from accessing the only Compass Swing available in the airport. We call on government to urgently fix this taxiway to prevent avoidable aircraft accidents on ground and to increase the capacity of the airport.”

    As part of measures to fix the sore situation,the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria ( FAAN) last week directed owners of abandoned aircraft at the graveyard of the Lagos International Airport to evacuate them to create more space for functional for aircraft for maneuvering at the airside .

    According the spokesman of the authority, Mr Yakubu Dati, the action has become necessary due to recurring operational hitches that have been posing serious safety concerns to aircraft and some infrastructure at the terminal.

    The director general of NCAA, Captain Mukhtar Usman, has however absolved  the regulatory authority of any laxity in the recurrence of incidents.

    He said the authority will continue to insist that safety recommendations arising from such incidents are implemented.

    He said relevant aviation agencies are collaborating to ensure air safety is not threatened. Ground collision is not restricted to Nigeria.It is a major concern for air safety in other countries including the U.S.

    The International Air Transport Association ( IATA) is also worried over the issue.

    In a report published in late 2007, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) highlighted that the lack of complete accident data and standards for ground handling hinders the effort to understand the nature, extent and cost of accidents and to improve safety. Investigative agencies only look into certain classes of accidents, and that their data is incomplete, especially in the area of nonfatal injuries.

    In 2002, the Flight Safety Foundation (FSF) were requested to investigate methods of improving ramp safety. During their research, FSF discovered that the extent of the cost of ground accidents far exceeded expectations due to the hidden nature of indirect costs.

    For example, the cost of repair is included in the cost of maintenance, and gate closures, diversion and re-ticketing costs are recorded elsewhere and usually not correlated to the incident. Because accidents also result in cancelled flights, lost ticket revenue, added costs for passenger lodging, and overtime for repairs, even minor ramp incidents can cost airlines $250,000 or more. The FSF estimates that for every dollar of aircraft damage, the actual cost to airlines is at least five times that amount.

    In 2003 the FSF launched the Ground Accident Prevention (GAP) programme. Using data developed by the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the Foundation currently estimate that 27,000 ramp accidents and incidents occur worldwide every year, which represents one per 1,000 departures. About 243,000 people are injured each year in these accidents and incidents; the injury rate is nine per 1,000 departures.

    The FSF currently estimate that the combined costs to the industry for ground accidents worldwide to be around US$10.8b. This includes commercial aircraft repairs (US$4b), corporate aircraft repairs (US$1b) and litigation charges as a result of injuries or deaths (US$5.8b).

    The Operator’s Flight Safety Handbook (OFSH) published by the FSF shows that damage and indirect costs from an aircraft to aircraft ground collision are 28 times greater than when a service vehicle collides with a stationary aircraft.

    Figures are not given in the report for the cost implications of a moving aircraft colliding with airport facilities but it can be reasonably conjectured that it would be at least half of the cost of an aircraft to aircraft collision.

    “Worried over the trend, the Nigerian Air Traffic Controllers Association  (NATCA) urged government to take a critical look at the reconstruction of the Lagos Central Taxiway, a second Abuja runway, a backup for the  Total Radar Coverage of Nigeria (TRACON) system as well as rehabilitation of airport facilities”

     

  • Suswam, lawmakers on collision course

    Suswam, lawmakers on collision course

    •Over financial records

    Governor Gabriel Suswam and members of the Benue State House of Assembly are on a collision course, following an invitation extended to three key government officials to appear before plenary tomorrow for questioning on financial records.

    The lawmakers first passed a resolution demanding financial records from the Special Adviser to the Governor of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Prince Solomom Wombo, the Chairman, Board of Internal Revenue Service (BIRS), Gabriel Asen and Commissioner for Finance, Omadachi Oklobia.

    The House asked for revenue records and money accruing from the agencies from the federation account and internally-generated revenue from January last year to date to be forwarded to them, last Thursday.

    However, on that day, the government officials failed to forward the documents requested by the Assembly,  the legislators became annoyed and extended another invitation and ordered that they should appear tomorrow unfailingly or risk arrest.

    The Nation investigation showed that the government officials may not appear before plenary because the executive arm of the government has lost the Commissioner for Rural Development and Cooperatives, who died recently.

    A commissioner, who pleaded anonymity, told The Nation that it was unreasonable on the part of the lawmakers to arm-twist the executive arm of government with a summon when they have lost a key government official.

    The commissioner said the timing of the invitation was wrong because the executive arm was mourning, “so the lawmaker should put the invitation on hold till further notice.”

    A governor’s aide told The Nation that Governor Suswam might have instructed the government officials not to honour the invitation.

     

  • Osun labour unions on collision course over strike

    The Trade Union Congress (TUC) and the Joint Negotiation Council (JNC) in Osun State are on a collision course with the Senior Civil Servants Association of Nigeria  (SCSAN) over a proposed warning strike.

    The SCSAN, through its chairman, Akinyemi Olatunji, gave the government a seven-day ultimatum to look into workers’ demands, including payment of salaries arrears or face industrial action.

    But the chairmen of the TUC and JNC, Francis Adetunji and Bayo Adejumo, warned workers against any “illegal strike”, saying anyone who fails to be at his duty post is “on his own”.

    The duo maintained that the SCSAN, as an affiliate of TUC, has no power to unilaterally ask workers to embark on an industrial action.

    They maintained that the government has regularly engaged and informed the leadership of the JNC, TUC and Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) on issues bordering on welfare of workers.

    The duo said: “We are convinced about the sincerity of the government in the face of  dwindling and late payment of  federal allocation to the state.”

    The JNC and the TUC, at a joint briefing at the weekend in Osogbo, the state capital, said there are processes and procedure for going on strike and which only  authorised unions could apply.

    They insisted that SCSAN is an affiliate of the TUC and therefore could not  call for workers’ strike alone.

    The duo said the ultimatum given by the association was not in line with labour law.

    Saying the state government had explained factors responsible for its inability to pay salaries as at when due, they urged workers to be considerate in their demands.

    The labour leaders also noted that most of the issues raised by SCSAN had been resolved by the government.

    Olatunji has been going from ministry to ministry ,asking workers to join a seven-day warning strike, starting from today.

    He highlighted the workers’ demands, which include prompt payment of workers’ salaries, promotion and review of contributing pension scheme.

  • Amosun’s aides, others injure in bus, convoy collision

    Amosun’s aides, others injure in bus, convoy collision

    Two aides of Governor Ibikunle Amosun and some occupants of a commercial Mitsubishi bus conveying foodstuffs were injured yesterday morning when the passenger bus ran into one of the Sports Utility Vehicles(SUV) in the convoy of the governor.

    The accident occurred at about 9.30am on Sapaade-Ogere, Ogun State, stretch of the Lagos-Ibadan expressway when the governor was travelling to Ekiti State.

    The affected jeep in the convoy was damaged.

    According to a source, the vehicles in Amosun’s convoy were going in the direction of Ibadan, Oyo State, when the rickety bus coming at the opposite end crashed into one of them.

    It was learnt that the accident occurred at a failed portion of the road, where repair work was being carried out.

    The driver of the commercial bus, it was gathered, lost control when he came face-to-face with  convoy at the bad portion  and rammed into  it.

    The women in the commercial bus were said to have been injured even as the governor alighted to sympathise with them.

    Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Yusuph Olaniyonu, who confirmed this to reporters, said no life was lost.

    He noted that it was just a minor accident as nobody sustained injury.

    He said: “We are going to Ekiti. Only one jeep was affected and we have transferred the occupants to our own bus.”