The Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority has constituted a 10-man committee to investigate foreign airlines over soaring fares in order to make sir travel affordable to citizens.
According to The PUNCH, the Director-General, NCAA, Chris Najomo, made this known in a statement made available to newsmen on Thursday following a two-day meeting between NCAA and foreign airlines, held at the headquarters of the NCAA in Abuja.
The aims of the committee, chaired by Director of Special Duties, Horatius Egua at NCAA, is to ensure foreign airlines adhere to government directives to unblock low-inventory tickets that have been inaccessible for over 18 months as well as recommend appropriate pricing of tickets in Nigeria compared to similar markets in the West African sub-region.
Other members of the committee includ the Director Public Affairs and Consumer Protection NCAA, Michael Achimugu; Rotimi Arogunjo General Manager, Licensing and Statistics NCAA, Rotimi Arogunjo, the Deputy General Manager, Legal Services NCAA, Ogechi Louis-Azode; President National Association of Nigerian Travel Agencies, Susan Akporiaye, Assistant General Manager, Fairs and Tariffs NCAA, Olaoluwa Oladipupo; Asst. Director FCCPC, David-Ojuigo; incoming President NANTA, Yinka Folami; and Chief Legal Officer FCCPC, Florence Abebe while Ifueko Abdulmalik, Senior Special Assistant, DG, NCAA is to serve as Secretary.
Egua identified the need for fair pricing, noting, “This is very discriminatory in nature. We cannot continue to pay higher fares compared to other countries in the sub-region that have similar distances, using the same operating aircraft. We have the market and in some cases we have more liberal taxes? This is unacceptable and we totally reject this.
He explained, “For instance, a distance of six hours from Ghana to London may sometimes cost about $800 while similar distance with similar operating aircraft cost over $2000 in Nigeria. This is discriminatory and an unfair practice and we reject this in totality,”
“In the last several months, Nigerians have been made to pay higher fares on international flights unjustly as all the foreign airlines increased their flight tickets astronomically citing the high exchange rate as well as other sundry issues and also deliberately blocked low inventory tickets making travel unbearable for Nigerians.”
The NCAA, following the outcry by Nigerians over the astronomical increase in air tickets, held the two-day meeting with the foreign airlines operating in Nigeria.
The meeting, brought together representatives from NCAA, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission and the National Association of Nigerian Travel Agencies with the International Air Transport Association, who represented the foreign airlines.
Lamenting the discriminatory practices and inflated fares, the authority expressed reservation and demanded an immediate reversal of the trend.
Key resolutions at the meeting included that the NCAA, FCCPC, NANTA, and the foreign airlines include the reduction of ticket costs and the unconditional unblocking of lower inventory tickets to the Nigerian market.
While responding to NCAA’s directive, several international airlines, including Lufthansa German Airlines, KLM, Egypt Air, Ethiopian Airlines, British Airways, Royal Air Maroc, RwandAir, and Turkish Airlines, have reportedly released all categories of low-inventory tickets.
Najomo was quoted as assuring Nigerians that the NCAA would do its best to protect their interests.