A teenager beat airline and airport security at the Benin Airport and sneaked into the tyre compartment of a Lagos-bound Arik plane, where he flew safely to the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos Nigeria, on Saturday morning.
There was, however, pandemonium at the airside of the Lagos
airport when passengers disembarking from the aircraft saw the teenager
as he emerged from the undercarriage (aircraft tyre hole) to join fellow
travellers.
The adolescent stowaway, identified as Daniel Ihekina, was immediately arrested by security officials at the airport.
The Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria and Arik Air confirmed the incident.
Although the General Manager, Corporate Communications, FAAN,
Mr. Yakubu Dati, said full and urgent investigation had commenced into
the mysterious circumstances that led to the huge breach in airport and
airline security, the situation has continued to beat the imagination of
aviation authorities in the country.
The situation, which has become a major source of worry among
the authorities, has also led to a blame game between FAAN and Arik.
FAAN, in a statement on Saturday, said it held “Arik Air
liable for the circumstances leading to the stowaway of a teenage boy on
its aircraft at the Benin Airport.”
In a statement signed by Dati, FAAN, said, “Arik Air acted
with impunity by not stopping the aircraft to check when the crew and
ground personnel’s attention was drawn to an abnormality on the tarmac.”
According to the FAAN spokesman, the procedure for such
infraction is for the crew to abort the flight and return to the apron
for check-up.
He blamed the airline for the alleged impunity, warning that
the airport authority would not tolerate such infraction from any
operator.
He said, “This is arrant display of impunity. The aircraft
should not have taxied further, but return to the apron until a proper
check is carried out on all parts of the aircraft. FAAN will not
tolerate such impunity henceforth from Arik or any airline. Any
violation would be met with applicable sanctions.
Dati, however, said the teenager was already giving useful information to unravel this ‘misnomer.’
In a swift reaction, Arik, in a statement, blamed FAAN for
the huge breach in security, noting that the incessant cases of security
breaches at the nation’s airport had become a major source of concern
to the airline.
The statement quoted Arik’s Managing Director, Mr. Chris
Ndulue, as saying, “We are worried by the incessant security lapses at
our airports. We are appealing to the management of FAAN to immediately
address the problem.
“The management of Arik Air has expressed shock over the
incident, wondering how the teenager beat the aviation security
personnel at the Benin Airport to get to the runway.”
Arik said its pilot had reported to the control tower the
presence of a strange boy in the bush about 200 – 300 metres at the end
of runway before leaving the airport.
Ndulue said the control tower had told its pilot that they were sending security men to the place to arrest the boy.
Ndulue, however, said, “As the captain was making his final
turn, preparatory for take-off, a cabin crew called his attention to the
information by some of the passengers that they saw a boy running
towards the airplane. The First Officer confirmed that they had observed
it earlier and alerted the control tower which responded that they had
sent the patrol team to arrest the boy. The captain again reported to
the control tower and was informed that the situation was under control
and that he had been cleared for take-off.
“On arrival at the domestic wing of MMA, Lagos, a teenage
boy, who apparently had sneaked into the aircraft main wheel well jumped
out and was arrested by Arik personnel and handed over to FAAN
security.”
The Arik aircraft with registration number, 5N-MJG Flight 44,
which left the Benin Airport around 9am for Lagos, was said to have on
board top officials of the Edo State Government.
A passenger aboard the flight, who spoke with Sunday Punch on
the telephone said, “We felt the signs in Benin when the plane was
about leaving and as it was moving slowly, we heard a loud noise as if
the tyre crushed somebody on the ground and we all started shouting. It
means the boy was already inside that tyre compartment before we left.
We left for Lagos, but when we landed at Lagos Airport, the boy came out
from the tyre hole, everybody started shouting.
“But speaking seriously, this shows that we have a serious
problem as regards securing our airports. This is a serious security
breach. If that boy was carrying bomb, it means he would have succeeded
in blowing up the plane. How can somebody be in an aircraft without
being detected; we are in trouble in this country.”
Though no official at the Benin Airport volunteered comment
on the issue, it was gathered that the teenager may have gained entrance
into the airport from the Akenzua road axis, where perimeter fencing is
non-existent at different points.
In 2010, a desperate young Nigerian, Emeka Okechukwu Okeke,
who tried to smuggle himself to the United States, died in the tyre
compartment of a Delta Airlines aircraft and was discovered on arrival
in New York.
Okeke, sneaked into the place at Lagos airport.
In 2012, the dead body of a young Nigerian man was also
discovered in the wheel well, the undercarriage compartment of a
domestic airline, after it returned from South Africa.
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