What could have amounted to
another major air disaster in the country was averted on Friday evening
when an Arik aircraft aborted landing at Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State
capital barely about 500 meters from the tarmac due to power cut at the
airport.The sudden power outage forced the pilot to hurriedly terminate his
landing plan and fly back to the sky where it hovered for about 30
minutes before flying back to Abuja because the person to turn on the
alternative power source was not available.
The passengers on
Arik Flight W3 533, including the Chairman of the National Human Rights
Commission, Chidi odinkalu, and some unnamed federal lawmakers, said to
be heading to Uyo for a retreat.
Mr Odinkalu confirmed the
incident to Premium Times. Contacted on the telephone early this
morning, he said, “Thank God we survived. If it had been a rainy night
with thunderstorm, anything could have happened to us. Some people need
to answer questions over that incident.”
The flight, originally
scheduled for 6:25 pm, left Abuja at about 7 pm. It returned to Abuja at
9: 35 pm. after hovering in the sky for over 30 minutes in expectation
that authorities at the Uyo airport would be able to light the runway to
enable it to land.
This incident appears to confirm reports of
probes by aviation authorities into air crashes in the country which
have blamed most of them on avoidable human errors.
The Nigeria’s
Aviation Investigation Bureau (AIB) had in some of its reports blamed
avoidable human errors and dereliction of duty by public officials
working in the aviation sector as major reasons for the loss of hundreds
of lives in air crashes in Nigeria.
The bureau, which is saddled
with the responsibility of investigating air accidents in the country,
stated these in its reports after the crashes involving two airlines,
Sky Executive Aviation Services (SEAS) and Sosoliso airline in 2002 and
2005 respectively.
Some of the human errors identified by the AIB
as causes of plane crashes include non-lightening of runways and
airfields (as it happened last night), poorly constructed drainage
culverts, inaccurate information by the control tower, lack of proper
certification of radio operators and poor supervision of aircraft
imported into the country.
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