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The Skyway Aviation Handling Company (SAHCO) says it was not
invited to the unveiling of Nigeria Air.

 

Boye Oyewumi, a representative of SAHCO, spoke on Tuesday
when he appeared before the house of representatives committee on aviation.

 

SAHCO is one of the main investors in the Nigeria Air
project, holding 15 percent shares.

 

Hadi Sirika, former minister of aviation, unveiled Nigeria
Air — the national carrier — about three days before the end of the former
President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

 

Oyewumi said the company read about the unveiling of the
national career on the pages of newspapers and social media.

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He said the unveiling process was “politically driven” and
meant to “whitewash” Nigerians.

 

“Even as stakeholders, we were not even aware of the
unveiling. We saw it in the newspapers and social media. We were not
consulted,” Oyewumi said.

 

Oyewumi further described the unveiling as a “naming
ceremony without a child being born”.

 

“We got an invitation to come and sign a shareholders
agreement after the unveiling,” he said.

 

Recall that the committee said the Nigeria Air project is a
fraud and that the federal government should immediately suspend its
operations.

 

At the investigative hearing, some government agencies also
denied taking part in the unveiling of the national carrier.

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Michael Ohiani, director-general of the Infrastructure
Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), said the agency was advised by the
ministry of justice to stay away from the process of setting up the national
carrier.

 

In December 2022, a federal high court in Lagos prohibited
the federal government from selling the shares of Nigeria Air to Ethiopian
Airlines.

 

Ohiani said the shareholders’ agreement has not been signed,
and that negotiation is expected to resume as soon as a court injunction is
lifted.

 

Mohammed Oduwowo, managing director of the Nigeria Airspace
Management Agency (NAMA), said the aircraft that was used for the unveiling was
a chartered Ethiopian Airline which returned to the country a day later.

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 “We had an approval.
We granted the aircraft a flight permit. It was meant to be a chartered flight
from Ethiopia to Nigeria. It was a chartered flight. It went back the following
day,” he said.