Arik Air shareholders have condemned the reported plan by
the federal government to hand over the airline to Ethiopian Airlines.
Ethiopian Airlines has submitted its bid to take
over the management of Arik Air, which the Asset Management Corporation of
Nigeria (AMCON) took over this year.
Speaking on behalf of the shareholders, former Vice
President of the airline, Senator Anietie Okon said “This is not coming as a
surprise since Ethiopian Airlines has a commercial objective of dominating
Africa.
“What is a surprise is the shamelessness and desperation of
our aviation authorities to mortgage the future of our country for gold and
silver.
“Arik Air, a wholly owned Nigerian company operated without
hitch for 10 years. It started when naira was 150/$1 and fuel was 97 per litre
and managed without any significant increase in fares, it survived for 10 years
in a very hostile operations environment, paying loans it obtained in USD and
salaries to over 2000 employees.
“The company ran into heavy clouds as the economy went into
recession and next line of action was for AMCON to take it over and now
hurrying to hand it over to a foreign company that will sack most of the
indigenous staff of the airline.”
He decried “the level of lack of patriotism and
shamelessness by some people in government offices” and described it as
“appalling and desecration of national decency and honor.
“I really will not blame Ethiopian. It is the gullible
Nigerians who will sell his countrymen for peanuts. The aviation industry is
losing Nigerian workers every day because the domestic airlines are dying.
“This is an industry that is projected to employ about 9.7
million Nigerian if well managed but everything is being handed over to foreign
companies that will sack our people.
“They should look at why Nigerian Airlines don’t survive for
a long time. They should look at their policies and operating environment in
the country, which to us is an indictment of the country itself.
“It is further complicated with the fact that Nigeria
generates the traffic that even all regional carriers including the famous
Ethiopian Airlines depend on in West and Central Africa.
“Now you will surrender your own airline to a foreign
competing airline that had suggested the liquidation of same entity. This
raises more questions than answers,” Okon told Thisday.
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