According to Thisday Newspaper report, the
Nigeria’s oldest airline, Aero Contractors, has transmuted to a national
carrier and has changed its name to Nigerian Eagle and would unveil it on
Sunday as national carrier by President Goodluck Jonathan on his return from
the UK.
One of its aircraft, a Boeing 737-500 classic, painted with new livery and the new name, landed in Lagos at about 8:45 pm on Tuesday night and was secretly parked in a private fixed based operation (FBO) facility at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos.
Informed sources told THISDAY on Wednesday,
“There will not be Aero Contractors anymore. It is now Nigerian Eagle and it
will be launched on Sunday by Mr. President. You will not see Aero anymore
after the launch of this airline”.
This confirms THISDAY’s earlier report that Aero
which the federal government owns 60 per cent of its stakes would become a
national carrier, but the name Nigerian Eagle was not the earlier name
government designated for the flag carrier; rather it was announced that it
would be called Nigeria One.
Industry observers say that government might
have decided to establish more than one national carrier or is using the
Nigerian Eagle as a decoy or it has decided to change the name, Nigeria One.
About three years ago the defunct Air Nigeria
earlier changed its name to Nigerian Eagle when it was under the management of
Capt Dapo Olumide before it was taken over by Jimoh Ibrahim under whom the
airline went under.
But Ministry sources denied that the Nigerian
Eagle would become the national carrier, saying that the Nigerian number one
airline was yet to berth, adding that the Nigerian Eagle aircraft would be used
as publicity plane for Super Eagles for the coming World Cup that would be
hosted in Brazil next year.
“If it is going to be the national carrier we
would have heard about it in the Ministry. I doubt that because we just held a
crucial meeting on the planned national carrier. This one is a publicity plane
for the Super Eagle that just qualified for the world cup,” the source told
THISDAY.
Recently the federal government acquired 60 per
cent interest in Aero through Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON),
while the Ibru family has 40 per cent stakes.
As a national carrier, the Nigerian Eagle is
expected to enjoy preferential rights or privileges accorded by the federal
government for international operations.
It would hold some lucrative routes in monopoly,
negotiate commercial agreements, pools and bilaterals with foreign airlines,
articulate manpower training for the sector and serve as diplomatic tool for
Nigeria.
Nigerian Eagle would easily codeshare with other
international airlines as this would improve Nigeria’s ability to take
advantage of Bilateral Air Service Agreement (BASA) it signs with other
countries.
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