Hundreds of protesting airport workers
on Monday blocked the road leading to the Murtala Muhammed International
Airport, Ikeja, Lagos, over the brutal beating of an official of the
Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, Muhammadu Shuaibu, by four
officers of the Nigerian Air Force.
The protesters marched from the FAAN
headquarters to the departure wing of the airport where they booed and
jeered the air force officers on duty.
A clash was averted by the leaders of
the group, as the workers shouted angry comments at some senior air
force officers who came to talk to the group.
PUNCH Metro had reported that
Shuaibu, a protocol officer in FAAN, was beaten to a coma by four
officers of the air force stationed at the airport.
The victim told our correspondent he was
appealing for the release of the number plate of his friend’s vehicle ─
which was removed by the officers ─ when he was hit from the back by
one of the men, before others joined.
The Command Public Relations Officer,
Logistics Command, NAF, Joel Abioye, had said Shuaibu struggled with the
officers and it was in the process that he sustained injuries to his
nostrils.
But the placard-carrying protesters on
Monday said they had been enduring harassment by officers of the air
force, adding that they would no longer take it.
Some of their placards read, “Never
again should air force officers brutalise FAAN workers”, “Allow aviation
security to handle airport security”, “Air force officers are touts in
uniforms”, “Travelling passengers are ATMs to the air force”, and “Sack
air force commandant now”, among others.
The General Secretary of the National
Union of Air Transport Employees, Olayinka Abioye, decried the torture
of Shuaibu, adding that the Nigerian Air Force should be moved from
airports.
He said, “A hard-working official of
FAAN, Muhammadu Shuaibu, was brutalised by four air force officers and
nothing has been done. We are aware that the air force has constituted
itself into a syndicate, removing number plates of vehicles and
reselling them to their owners.
“We are saying it loud and clear that we
will no longer tolerate their presence in any Nigerian airport because
they have no business being here.
“The aviation security is competent
enough to handle the security in all Nigerian airports and if at all any
support is needed, the barbaric nature of certain elements in the air
force has shown that they cannot operate here.”
The General Secretary of the National
Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers, Ocheme Aba, said the group
had received several petitions of brutality against its members by
officers of the air force, adding that efforts to get redress had been
abortive.
He said, “We tried to involve the Nigeria Police to seek redress, but unfortunately, they appear to be helpless.
“We are doing this to end this impunity.
We also call on the Federal Government and the aviation authority to
review the security arrangement at airports.”
The National President of Air Transport
Services Senior Staff Association of Nigeria and Financial Secretary of
the Trade Union Congress, Okeowo Benjamin, gave the air force a 21-day
ultimatum to get out of the airports.
He said, “All over the world, the
airport environment is a serene environment, where responsible people do
their businesses. Anybody that does not act as a responsible citizen,
either in uniform or not, is not allowed at the airport.
“We cannot turn our airports into motor
parks. The air force has no business here; we must be treated with
dignity. Any attempt by anybody to treat our workers like touts will be
resisted.
“All military personnel should be
withdrawn from airports and those involved in the brutality at MMIA
should be brought to book. If this is not done, it means that the
government is saying the law of the jungle operates in the airport and
this we will not allow.
“If they don’t do the right thing, we will withdraw our services.
“If within 21 days we do not get any response, we shall allow the air force men to run the airport.”
The Public Relations Officer of the
FAAN, Mr. Yakubu Dati, said the agency was working with the air force
authorities to get to the roots of the case, adding that it believed
justice would be done.
“We have been talking to the NAF and
they have assured us that they have started investigations to fish out
the culprits for punishment,” he said.
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