For the umpteenth time in the past year, thousands of passengers in Nigeria's airports have been left stranded.
But this time, it’s not just one airline. Three have run into trouble at the same time.
Dana Air grounded flights after the government ordered the airline to stop flying.
Passengers were left stranded in several airports when Arik Air planes they had booked to travel on didn’t show up.
And when staff at Aero Contractors went on strike because of poor pay and conditions, its services also stopped.
Damaging image
Arik is Nigeria's biggest domestic airline, normally transporting thousands of people around 22 Nigeria airports daily.
Aero Contractors is the second biggest airline.
Dana Air, an airline that was once very popular, was just getting its customers back after a terrible air accident in June.
You
can imagine the chaos when three major airlines have problems at the
same time. Nobody knows the exact reasons why these airlines are failing
passengers.
Some analysts say it is because the aviation
authorities are concerned about safety. Others blame the airlines'
financial problems for not being able to provide the services scheduled.
Whatever
the reasons are behind the current meltdown, it is damaging the image
and confidence that Nigerian and foreign travellers have in domestic
airlines, and as a result in the country's wider economy.
Few alternatives
Ironically, despite the problem of grounded and cancelled flights, the industry continues to grow.
This
is because people in Nigeria simply have no other ways to get between
major cities. Infrastructure like good roads and railways, are poor, so
passengers have little choice but to wait and hope the airlines
function.
Aviation bosses are also accused of not imposing enough penalties on airlines that fail to fly.
That's why the problem seems to keep returning.
Even
though hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent on revamping
airports, some passengers feel the industry's leaders are not paying
enough attention to ensuring airlines play by the rules.
Until that happens, this problem of grounded and abandoned flights may happen again.
culled from www.aljazeeera.com
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