The Minister of State for
Aviation, Hadi Sirika, has said the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja
runway repair is 57. 5 per cent completed. He insisted the April 19 reopening
date is achievable.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
Sirika
disclosed this during a media tour led by the Minister of Information and
Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, at the airport yesterday. According to the
minister, the project was being executed by the contractor in accordance with
laid down programme of work and reiterated that there would be no need for time
extension.
He
explained that the first segment, which is 1.2 kilometres has been completed,
while asphalt was being laid on the second segment of 2.4 kilometres. He added
that the runway was being rebuilt with new and improved technology known as the
Glass Fibre Grid to give it strength and prevent it from cracking.
Sirika
maintained that this is the first time that a Nigerian runway is being treated
with such material, which is 50 toners to cover the entire runway. “The airport
will be more compliant with the International Civil Aviation Organization
(ICAO) standard and best practices and will be more efficient at the time it is
going to be reopened,” he said.
The
Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, said the essence of the tour
was to enable the media have firsthand information on the level of work on the
runway. Mohammed stated that it was to reassure the public that the six weeks
closure of the airport would not be extended.
Meanwhile,
a Nigerian pilot, Captain Ademilola Odujinrin, has made history, becoming the
first African pilot to fly solo around the world. Odujinrin, who works for Air
Djibouti, completed the final leg of his historic journey Wednesday afternoon,
landing safely at Washington Dulles International Airport, United States, where
the journey began in September 2016.
The
pilot completed the entire circumnavigation in a Cirrus SR22, stopping in more
than 15 countries on five continents, returning to Washington DC. The flight is
part of Project Transcend, a foundation, which aims to inspire young people to
achieve their goals, regardless of their personal circumstances.
Ademilola said: “Ever since I was a child, I dreamed of one day flying around the world. We have a responsibility to lead by example and follow our dreams. I want African children to think: ‘I can do this too!” Ademilola has logged over 4,000 hours as a commercial Boeing 737 pilot since earning his pilot licence six years ago.
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