The Federal Government has ordered the suspension of flight
operations from Liberia and Sierra Leone into Nigerian. Benedict
Adeyileka, the Acting Director General of the Nigerian Civil Aviation
Authority, (NCAA) who made this announcement yesterday said the
regulatory authority had to take this action to protect Nigeria from the
deadly Ebola virus which is ravaging some parts of West, East and
Central Africa.
According to Adeyileka, Asky Airlines which operates scheduled flight
operations between Nigeria and the two West African states has been
ordered to suspend all flights into Nigeria. “ASky Airline operations to
Nigeria has been suspended with immediate effect,” said Adeyileka.
“Arik Air which had earlier suspended their flights to Monrovia and
Freetown has been advised to maintain the cessation of flights until
cleared by NCAA,” he added.
Asky becomes the second airline, after indigenous carrier Arik
Air suspended its services into the two countries from Nigeria.
A-Sky Airline is an important player in the West, East and Central
Africa operating 80 flights into Lagos and Abuja weekly. The Airline
flew Mr. Patrick Sawyer, a consultant to the Liberian Ministry of
Finance who was obviously infected with the virus into Lagos, Nigeria
which created panic and diverted world attention to Nigeria.
The passenger has since died, forcing the Lagos State government to
close down the hospital and quarantine about 59 people suspected to have
made contact with the late Mr. Sawyer before and after he died. The
Country Manager of the ASky was subsequently invited to the NCAA to
offer explanation to the authority on the incident and show evidence of
actions taken by the airline since the pandemic in their core areas of
operationbroke out.
But the airline is representative could not offer any conclusive or
substantial evidence neither did he demonstrate any capacity to be able
to prevent a reoccurrence of flying in Ebola victims to Nigeria.
Consequently, the Acting Director General and the top management of
NCAA therefore decided that the lives of millions of Nigerians were too
precious to be risked on a platter of negligence of an airline.
The airline operations was therefore suspended with immediate effect
until it is able to sufficiently and evidently prove that adequate
machinery has been put in place to provide adequate screening of
passengers in all their points of operation including profiling of each
passenger.

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