Nigeria resume international flights

11 Sep, 2020 - 16:09 0 Views
Nigeria resume  international flights

The ManicaPost

Lagos. — The first scheduled international flight landed at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos, on Saturday after the over five-month shutdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The federal government had fixed September 5, for the reopening of airports to international flights starting with the MMIA and the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA), Abuja.

Strict Covid-19 protocols were put in place by the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) in preparation for the reopening. The federal government, through the Presidential Task Force on Covid-19, released protocols for departing and arriving passengers, part of which was the negative PCR test.

As the airport reopened, the first flight operated by Middle East Airlines, ME 571 from Beirut, Lebanon, landed at the airport at about 2:18 pm with 222 passengers and 17 crew members. However, Daily Trust on Sunday reported that there was no flight to Abuja yesterday while another British Airways flight was being expected at the time of filing this report.

The Regional Manager, South-West FAAN, Mrs Victoria Shina-Aba spoke to journalists at the MMIA and said the airport was reopened five months and 13 days after it had been closed to international flights.

Shina-Aba disclosed that during the flight ban, the airport processed 192 evacuation and special flights and 1 404 cargo flights. She said a lot of measures had been put in place to boost the confidence of travellers and curb the spread of Covid-19. On the various steps passengers would have to undergo, she advised departing passengers to come to the airport on time.

She said: “We have been able to demarcate the gates. The first gate is for crew and staff only. The B and C gates are for passengers. We have another gate for elderly and special people.

“At each of these gates, we have water provided for passengers to wash their hands. We have bag sanitising stations where passengers get their bags sanitised. Then the temperature of passengers is taken.

At the passenger gate, we have infra-red cameras that can capture many people at the same time. If you try to access the place without face masks, it will indicate that your face mask is not on.

“We have signs everywhere telling people what to do. The security will not allow passengers without face masks on.

“We have sanitisers at the gates. If you have a temperature higher than the normal, the port health will take you to a place that has been provided just to sit down for a while and check you again after some minutes. If you are okay, you will be allowed to travel,” she explained.

She said FAAN had done markings to ensure that physical distancing protocol is observed while people should queue according to the markings for passengers. She assured that FAAN staff are always on stand-by to disinfect objects that are touched by passengers regularly, adding that boarding is also done in batches.

Meanwhile, Emirates said it would resume passenger services to Lagos on September 7 and Abuja on September 9.

The resumption of flights to both Nigerian cities takes Emirates’ African network to 13 destinations.

Flights to Lagos will operate four times a week on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday, the airline said in a statement.

Flights to and from Abuja will operate three times weekly on Wednesday, Friday and Sunday.

Similarly, Ethiopian Airlines would begin flights to Abuja on September 7 and Lagos on 8, according to Tilahun Tadesse, an official of the airline in Nigeria. — Daily Trust.

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