21:37 01/07/2015
Abuja - Nigeria should merge its debt-laden airlines and create a
national carrier in partnership with a global airline to boost revenue
and create jobs, a ruling party strategy report seen by Reuters on
Wednesday shows.
Muhammadu Buhari, who was sworn in as president
of Africa's top oil producer and biggest economy on May 29, is
considering recommendations in the strategy document produced by a
19-member committee from his All Progressives Congress (APC) party.
The
report may influence policy decisions by Buhari, who was elected on an
anti-corruption ticket and has vowed to recover billions of dollars
allegedly stolen by officials. He has, however, been criticised for not
naming a cabinet yet and party officials say it may not happen until
September.
Three years ago, Asset Management Corporation of
Nigeria (AMCON), a state-backed "bad bank" established in 2009, took on
more than 132 billion naira ($663 million) of debts from 12 Nigerian
airlines including the biggest carrier, Arik, and Aero.
The
APC strategy document says the aviation ministry should create a
national airline "in partnership with a global airline", which would
involve "merging all airlines currently with AMCON", to serve as a West
and Central African hub.
The
report, submitted to Buhari about two weeks ago, says the proposals
would lead to "increased revenue, reduce capital flight, expand the
local aviation industry and create more employment opportunities due to
the scale created".
British billionaire Richard Branson set up
domestic and international carrier Virgin Nigeria in 2000, but pulled
out in 2010 in frustration at what he said was interference by
politicians and regulators.
The airline he created, which was
later rebranded Air Nigeria, closed in 2012 after collapsing under about
35 billion naira of debt which left it unable to pay staff, a former
finance director of the company told Reuters at the time.
The APC
strategy report also proposes upgrading the airport in the capital Abuja
by building a second runway, as a possible way to increase passenger
numbers.
The report says airline operators should be required to
have a minimum of five planes, rather than three now, and capital
requirements should be increased to 2.5 billion naira for a domestic
carrier and 5 billion for an international one.
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