Tag: Lagos airport

  • Cargo Clearing Resumes as FAAN Reduces Tariffs Following Eight-Day Strike

    Cargo Clearing Resumes as FAAN Reduces Tariffs Following Eight-Day Strike

    According to an update by The Guardian, freight forwarders and cargo agents at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA) in Lagos have called off their week-long industrial action. The breakthrough came after the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) agreed to lower the proposed cargo tariff from N20 per kilogram to N15 per kg. This compromise follows an eight-day strike that had completely paralyzed clearing operations at the country’s busiest airport.

    The strike had led to a massive backlog of goods, including perishables and industrial raw materials, causing significant losses for importers. Frank Ogunojemite, President of the Africa Association of Professional Freight Forwarders & Logistics (APFFLON), confirmed that agents have been directed to resume duties immediately. While the new N15 rate is still an increase from the previous N7 per kg, the agents accepted it as a “middle ground” to allow business to continue.

    Validating the resolution, Vanguard reports that the agreement was brokered during a high-stakes meeting chaired by Lekan Thomas, FAAN’s Director of Cargo Development. The publication quotes Henry Agbebire, FAAN’s spokesperson: “The outcome reflects the spirit of dialogue and shared responsibility.” ThisDay added that ground handling companies like SAHCO and NAHCO have been put on high alert to handle the surge of clearing requests expected over the next 48 hours.

    Echotitbits take:

    The resolution of this strike is a relief for the supply chain, but the 114% hike (from N7 to N15) will inevitably be passed on to consumers. Expect a slight uptick in the price of imported air-freighted goods by the end of the month. The government is clearly looking for revenue, but at the risk of fueling inflation.

    Source: The Punch – https://punchng.com/faan-cargo-agents-reach-compromise-on-cargo-tariff/, February 11, 2026

    Photo credit: The Punch

  • Air Peace Rejects Barbados Diversion Claims as Stranded Passenger Story Spreads

    Air Peace Rejects Barbados Diversion Claims as Stranded Passenger Story Spreads

    2025-12-30 14:00:00

    According to Punch, passengers alleged they bought Lagos–Kingston tickets but were diverted to Barbados and later detained and deported—claims the airline disputed, insisting rerouting was voluntary and refunds were offered where applicable.

    The story centres on documentation and transit-visa issues, route-change communication at check-in, and what happened after arrival when onward connections were missed.

    The incident has quickly become a diaspora-travel flashpoint, raising questions about disclosure standards, passenger rights and handling of irregular operations on complex itineraries.

    The Guardian reported passengers claimed diversion was announced without prior notice, adding an airline spokesperson promised to respond “soon.” FIJ quoted an affected passenger saying, “Despite holding a valid Jamaican visa, I was forced to travel to a country with which I had no prior connection…”

    Echotitbits take: This could become a benchmark consumer-protection case. Watch NCAA’s findings, whether refunds/rerouting commitments are documented, and tighter ticketing disclosures for ‘via’ itineraries across Nigerian carriers.

    Source: The Punch — December 29, 2025 (https://punchng.com/25-air-peace-passengers-stranded-in-barbados-airline-defends-self/?utm_medium=web&utm_source=auto-read-also)

    The Punch 2025-12-29

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • NDLEA intercepts UK-bound cocaine concealed in factory-sealed starch sachets

    NDLEA intercepts UK-bound cocaine concealed in factory-sealed starch sachets

    2025-12-29 09:00:00
    According to Punch, NDLEA operatives uncovered 1.5kg of cocaine concealed inside factory-sealed cold-water starch sachets at the export shed of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, and arrested an ex-convict alongside cargo agents linked to the attempted shipment to the UK.

    The concealment method underscores how traffickers exploit everyday export items to reduce suspicion, while enforcement agencies tighten checks on logistics chains and facilitation networks around airports.

    Beyond seizures, successful prosecution and disruption of supply networks remain the deterrence test for interdiction efforts.

    Channels TV reports “the seizure of 75 parcels of cocaine, weighing a total of 1.50 kilograms,” while The Guardian also states the drugs were “concealed in factory-sealed sachets of cold-water starch and destined for the United Kingdom.”

    Echotitbits take: Traffickers innovate faster than paperwork. The winning move is sustained profiling, tighter cargo-agent oversight, and faster court timelines that turn arrests into convictions.

    Source: The Punch — December 29, 2025 (https://punchng.com/ndlea-uncovers-uk-bound-cocaine-hidden-in-starch-at-lagos-airport/)
    The Punch 2025-12-29

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Ground-handling mishap dents new Air Peace aircraft, sparking delays and calls for accountability

    Ground-handling mishap dents new Air Peace aircraft, sparking delays and calls for accountability

    Photo Credit: The Nation
    2025-12-27 07:01:00

    Reporting by The Nation indicates a ground-handling incident at the Lagos airport damaged a newly inducted Air Peace aircraft, forcing operational disruptions and knock-on delays for passengers.

    The incident involved ground equipment contacting the aircraft while passengers were already boarded, with the airline stressing that modern engine-area repairs can be extremely costly and time-consuming.

    Air Peace’s position is that such disruptions are not only a service failure to customers, but also a financial burden—especially when damage affects sensitive aircraft components and schedules across multiple routes.

    The episode adds to recurring tension in Nigeria’s aviation ecosystem: airlines want stricter accountability for handlers, while regulators face pressure to enforce safety and compensation standards.

    Punch corroborated the development, reporting that a “ground handling vehicle damaged a new Air Peace aircraft,” while Air Peace spokesman Mike Achimugu said, “a ground handler’s conveyor belt hit the aircraft, causing damage.”

    Echotitbits take:
    Expect sharper scrutiny of handler competence, equipment condition, and ramp safety rules at major airports. What to watch next: whether the responsible handler faces penalties, and whether Air Peace pursues claims that set a stronger precedent for industry liability.

    Source: The Nation — December 26, 2025 (https://thenationonlineng.net/ground-handling-equipment-damages-air-peaces-new-aircraft/)
    The Nation December 26, 2025

  • Report says FG committed about ₦1.9trn to airport upgrades over two years

    Report says FG committed about ₦1.9trn to airport upgrades over two years

    2025-12-14

    According to The Punch, a report says the Federal Government approved or committed roughly ₦1.9 trillion to airport upgrades over a two-year period, spanning equipment, safety systems and infrastructure improvements.

    The report links the spending to plans to modernise aviation facilities and strengthen safety and operational reliability across airports.

    The Guardian Nigeria reported related approvals around navigation and communication upgrades and described the effort as a comprehensive modernisation drive for air safety.

    BizWatch Nigeria also reported the overhaul and said it is aimed at improving air safety and modernising aviation infrastructure.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: The real measure isn’t the headline figure but delivery: which airports get what upgrades, whether timelines are met, and whether maintenance capacity is built into procurement. Watch for project breakdowns, independent oversight, and whether upgrades reduce delays, incidents and operating costs for airlines and passengers.

    Source: The Punch — 14 Dec 2025 (https://punchng.com/fg-earmarked-n1-9tn-for-airport-upgrades-in-two-years-report/)