The Minister
of State, Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika, has assured the unions in the
aviation industry that no worker will be sacked in the proposed
concession programme of the federal government.

The
government has set out plan to concession four major airports in Lagos,
Abuja, Port Harcourt and Kano in the first phase of the programme, while
the rest of the airports under the management of the Federal Airports
Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) would be concessioned in the second phase.
The
workers, through the aviation unions have opposed the concession plan
because of the fear that they would lose their jobs, but government said
it does not have the resources to continue to fund airport
infrastructure development and therefore want to bring the private
sector funding through concession.
The
ministers aid, when he met with the unions represented by the Air
Transport Senior Staff Services of Nigeria (ATSSSAN) and the National
Union of Air Transport Employees (NUATE) in Lagos weekend, that
government would give the unions the opportunity to become members of
the Concession Project Delivery Committee, to enable them make inputs to
better the process.
Sirika said
the federal government has earmarked the Nnamdi Azikiwe International
Airport (NAIA), Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Mallam
Aminu Kano International Airport (MAKIA) and Port Harcourt International
Airport (PHIA) for the first phase of concession which would be
followed by the cargo designated airports and then others later.
Although a
particular date has not been set for this process, but during the
meeting with the unions, Sirika reiterated that the airports as they
are, were a major blemish which needed improvement and modernisation.
He stated
that the decision behind government’s resolve to concession was the
over-riding national interest of the country in ensuring the
establishment and sustenance of world-class standards in infrastructural
development and service delivery.
He assured
the unions that concession is not tantamount to privatisation or
outright sale and explained that the institutions being concessioned
remained the properties of the FAAN and Nigeria, noting that more jobs
would be generated at the end of the concession.
“You see,
government has no plan whatsoever to sell national assets but it was
sheer misconception. But the truth is that government does not have
money to invest and even if they could, with the sheer bureaucracy it
could take ten years and Nigerians are tired of what is on ground and
want something new,” the minister said.
By Chinedu Eze/Thisday
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