The recent reports of
the Senate and House of Representatives Joint Committee on Aviation on
crash of Dana and Allied aircraft which concluded that the Nigerian
Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) and its officers were not competent as
against international judgment on the agency will only mar the
industry’s successes rather than reshape it.
The reason is
because both the upper and lower chambers of the legislature allowed
what some industry experts called ‘self-imposed’ rules to interfere with
known international practice, hence some detrimental pronouncements
were made out of ill-information and political interests.
If
there is any issue that has been more debated in recent times in the
aviation sector, it is the crashes in Lagos and Accra, which
unfortunately happened within 24 hours of each other last year.
The
issue became more prominent not only because it affected human lives
directly but because some bodies that were supposed to be silent on the
matter interfered and turned it into politics of some sort, thereby
making the aviation sector and Nigeria a laughing stock in the
international community.
While the government could sometimes act
on the spur of the moment when an unfortunate incident or accident
mishap happens, rather than achieve intended results, it distorts laid
down procedures.
For instance, the fact that a public hearing was
conducted by the National Assembly into the crash alone stands against
international aviation regulations as contained in the International
Civil Organization (ICAO) which Nigeria is a signatory to.
Even
though the plan to conduct the public hearing was opposed by Stella
Oduah, aviation minister and the same plan came under attack of members
of Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON), the lawmakers went ahead with it,
strangulating global norms.
In a petition addressed to Mohammed
Joji, chairman of the committee by the Secretary General of AON, with
copies sent to President Goodluck Jonathan, David Mark, the senate
president; Aminu Tambuwal, the speaker of the House of Representatives,
and other principal officers of the National Assembly, the airline
operators noted that “it would be illogical to conduct any public
hearing or investigation when the body statutorily charged with that
responsibility, Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) was yet to conclude
its investigation.
“In addition, members of the association noted
that in any aircraft accident all over the world, public hearing into
aircraft accident is not held in public because of its volatility due to
loss of lives in such an accident, as it could heat up the polity. If
this is allowed to continue it will put the Aviation Industry in bad
light,” AON warned.
ICAO standards
When an accident
happens involving an international civil aviation flight, Annex 13 of
the International Civil Aviation Convention sets out the rules on the
notification, investigation and reporting of the accident. It spells out
who should conduct the investigation, which are the parties who can be
involved, the rights of each party, how the investigation should be
conducted, and how the final results should be reported.
Annex 13
also states that the sole objective of the investigation of an accident
or incident is to prevent accidents and incidents and the investigation
is not to apportion blame or liability. In the event of an air crash,
ICAO standards stipulate that the accident investigation agency of a
country conducts thorough investigation and make recommendations on the
crash.
Most air accident investigations are carried out by an
agency of a country that is associated in some way with the accident.
For example, the Air Accidents Investigation Branch conducts accident
investigations on behalf of the British Government as the Accident
Investigation Bureau (AIB) conducts same on behalf of Nigeria.
Snippets from report vs standards
The
conclusion by the National Assembly that the NCAA did not comply with
its own procedures for issuance of Air Operator’s Certificate (AOC) to
Dana Airlines and that most NCAA inspectors are not licensed or type
rated on aircraft.
From available
records, the AOC process is perhaps the most intense, technical and
comprehensive safety process the NCAA engages in. It is a five phase
process which includes flying the aircraft in demonstration flights for
50 hours without passengers in the 4th phase. The only people on the
aircraft are the crew and NCAA Safety Inspectors.
According to
Harold Demuren, NCAA director general, who reacted to the allegation,
the process of AOC issuance also “involves analysis of technical and
other operational manuals and processes of the airline including number
of crew and their qualifications and evidence of the plan or program for
carrying out both light and heavy repairs on the aircraft of the
airline.”
The process, Demuren said, is exactly the same for
every airline, adding that after the crash, Dana has undergone the
rigorous AOC recertification.
Demuren explained that ICAO
requirements for Aviation Safety Inspectors in Civil Aviation
Authorities (CAA) globally is that they must possess aeronautical
engineering degrees and complete aircraft manufacturer’s course on the
various types of aircraft and engine operating in the country.
“The
NCAA fully complies with this. These are key issues that were inspected
and examined in Nigeria in passing the ICAO Safety Audit and United
States Federal Aviation Administration (US- FAA) Category-1. Even
persons who were previously maintenance engineers cease to be when they
start working for the CAA. The CAA’s role is safety oversight, not
aircraft repair, among NCAA safety inspectors include pilots type rated
that flew the MD-83,” Demuren explained.
The report also recommends that the Director General of NCAA himself be removed from office for negligence and incompetence.
On
this, experts are of the opinion that “what the report characterises as
negligence actually demonstrates appropriate safety precautions and
deployment of the right, skilled and qualified personnel in carrying out
the functions of the NCAA.
“The NCAA AOC procedure is in line
with regulatory requirements, international practice and ICAO standards.
It has been developed to a level of competence that has never been in
its history,” the NCAA DG said.
Reacting to the allegations,
Demuren dismissed the claims noting that currently, Nigeria and this
current administration have proudly attained the highest available
standards in aviation.
“We are currently not on the European
Union Blacklist. We possess the ICAO Universal Safety Audit
certification, and U.S. FAA Category-1 certification. Even after the
crash, our current reputation is enviable and exemplary in Africa.
Recently, ICAO sought Nigeria’s assistance with the possibility of
sharing its experience in promoting safety with several other African
countries,” Demuren added.
Stakeholders’ view
Members
of the Air Transport Services Senior Staff Association (ATSSSAN)
berated the lawmakers for this position saying that the public is only
being fed with wrong information from those that are supposed to
represent them rightly.
“It is therefore incorrect; the sweeping
conclusion by the House that NCAA does not have a single qualified
inspector on the MD 83. It is also not true that the NCAA does not have
in its employment any person rated on the MD-83.
“From our
investigation in NCAA and from commentaries from our members, NCAA
inspectors pride themselves with multiple ratings and some of the best
training portfolio in the world,” Benjami Okewu, president, Air
Transport Services Senior Staff Association (ATSSSAN) said in a
statement.
Another error made by the legislators was on the fact
that Dana Air made 14 air returns in three years apart from noting that
MD-83 aircraft, which was used by Dana, had been phased out by the
manufacturer.
Analysts note that such statements could be
misleading because ‘Air returns are not necessarily an indication that
the aircraft is not airworthy. It is a standard recommended safety
precautionary measure and after every single air return. NCAA
Airworthiness Safety Inspectors physically clear the aircraft before it
is released back to operation.
Demuren explained that current
operators of MD-83 aircraft range from the largest foreign and domestic
carriers to new start-up airlines and charter operators.
“Two of the three largest
United States airlines; American Airlines and Delta operate MD-83s
currently. American Airlines has 275 of the series in its fleet. Delta
has 117 of this aircraft type,” NCAA DG said.
Condemning another
part of the report which asked government to revoke the license of Dana
Airlines, Olumide Ohunayo, a travel analyst, described it as a bad one
adding that the airline has just been recertified by the NCAA and some
other airlines are going through that same process.
“If the
legislature views the certification of Dana despite having an
international Air Maintenance Organization (AMO) as partner as faulty
and that the NCAA cannot be trusted, it means all other AOCs issued by
the NCAA should be revoked with immediate effect; anything short of this
is racism. I just pray their country of descent will not target
Nigerian investors too, the priority should be payment of compensation
to all,” Ohunayo explained.
He said that the directive demanding
for the removal of the Director General and the dismissal of the
engineer who inspected the ill-fated aircraft is ‘distasteful, hasty and
ugly.’
“Rather, a speedy investigation and conclusion of the
accident report should be our priority; at that point there will be no
place to hide for everyone anymore. What is playing out right now is the
age-long rivalry between the academically qualified engineers and those
that rose through the ranks, which has metamorphosed into type
qualified and type rated.
“We have got to the stage where
industry experts and consultants that supplied the legislature with
information should come out boldly and defend their reports, information
and allegations individually or collectively rather than hide under the
ambit of the hallowed chambers,” he pointed out.
Ohunayo also
noted that demands of the Senate is not based on tribal sentiments as
espoused in some quarters rather it is based on some information that
look mischievous emanating from the cocktail of submissions made before,
during and after the public hearing.
He cautioned that the
director general of the NCAA should not be tagged with incompetence
based on his record so far, adding that he should rather be decorated
with national honors for elevating the regulatory institution rather
than being hounded disrespectfully.
“Let the senate hang proven corruption charges and breach of contract on him, the tide will change ferociously,” he added.
He
cited that ROSAVIATSIA, the Russian equivalent of NCAA was almost
pushed last year, by their parliament to revoke the licenses of some
airlines due to air mishaps but the Agency resisted and conducted their
investigations.
“Red Wings Airline only last week lost its AOC in
that process. The Russian regulator said they were losing the license
not because of the air crash they had on the 29th of December 2012, but
due to the numerous significant violations found during recertification.
The airline lacked financial resources to provide ongoing operations
consistent with appropriate level of safety. These are processes and
procedures without interference but requisite oversight responsibility
by all parties,” Ohunayo stated.
Ohunayo concluded that by being
hasty and not conforming to international standards, ‘we are scaring
investors, we need to stop the bickering and attract them by
capitalizing on our Category 1 status.”
No comments:
Post a Comment