The
Federal Government has barred airlines from flying into the Maiduguri
airport until March 2014; documents obtained by our correspondent have
shown.
According to a Notice to Airmen sent by
the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency to airline operators, a copy of
which was obtained by our correspondent, the carriers were told that the
airport would no longer be available for flights until March 2014.
In the NOTAM, which was filed through
NAMA’s Aeronautical Information Services, and sent to some Control
Towers across the country, pilots were informed that the Maiduguri
airport was shut during the first week of December and would not be
available until early March next year.
Further investigations by our
correspondent revealed that the Federal Government decided to shut the
airport after Boko Haram insurgents destroyed some equipment belonging
to NAMA.
A NAMA source at one of the airports in
the North, who confirmed the development, said it was the agency’s
generators that were destroyed by the Boko Haram sect during the recent
attack on the Maiduguri Air Force base.
He said the generators might not be
fixed until next year, expressing the hope that the government would
have fixed the situation before the March date when the airport was
expected to be re-opened.
Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, was
on December 2 attacked by Boko Haram insurgents, leading to the death
of two military personnel and members of the sect, and the destruction
of three decommissioned military aircraft, two helicopters and property
worth millions of naira.
Owing to the siege, military authorities and the Borno State Government slammed a 24-hour curfew on the city and its environs.
The attack forced the Federal Airports
Authority of Nigeria to shut the Maiduguri airport and airlines
hurriedly cancelled their flights to the city.
Arik Air had to cancel its Abuja to
Maiduguri morning flight on Monday following the attack, just as roads
leading into the city were closed.
However, the FAAN spokesman, Mr. Yakubu Dati, said on Monday that the airport had been opened.
He said the Maiduguri airport was just
closed for a day following the Boko Haram attack on the nearby Air Force
base and had since been re-opened.
But findings revealed that the airport
had yet to be reopened. Arik Air said it had yet to resume operations to
the Maiduguri airport because the airport was still closed.
Early this year, domestic airlines
operating flights into Kano, Maiduguri, Yola and other volatile cities
the North had announced plans to stop flights into the cities due to
security concerns.
The development came a few months after
some of the domestic carriers cancelled night-stops for their crew and
aircraft in extremely volatile northern cities, especially Maiduguri.
The security situation had forced the foreign airlines to stop night stops at the Abuja airport.
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