
Uncategorized
Concerns as Japa syndrome hits aviation, agencies lose technical staff
The apex regulatory authority, the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), has lost 15 inspectors in recent times to brain drain.
Also, the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Zaria lost 20 technical staff in the last five years.
The NCAA is said to be the hardest hit with dozens of inspectors leaving the organisation for “greener pastures.”
The Civil Aviation Authority is responsible for oversight and surveillance of the industry, enforcing regulations for all service providers and players in the industry.
For the airlines especially, the CAA is responsible for providing guidance for all aspects of their activities to ensure compliance with regulations.

It is in charge of issuance of licences to new and existing (upon expiration) airlines and ensures the airworthiness of aircraft flying over the Nigerian sky.
To effectively do this, the authority requires adequate technical manpower (inspectors) who are either pilots or engineers to carry out routine and regular checks on airlines.
With over 10 scheduled airlines and 22 non-scheduled, as well as over 30 prospective carriers currently undergoing the process of certification, it becomes a herculean task to meet the urgent needs of operators.
It was learnt that the NCAA is facing a severe shortage of technical manpower, which is stretching its capacity to meet the needs of operators as they have to queue before getting several approvals done.
Why inspectors are leaving
The japa syndrome hitting the NCAA is in two-folds. While some leave the country for greener pastures, majority of them leave for in-country pastures to airlines.
For instance, the inspectors who are either pilots or engineers, have the option of working for airlines who pay four times higher than what the NCAA pays.
The NCAA, owing to the existing civil service structure, cannot exceed a particular threshold as stipulated in the conditions of service for civil servants in Nigeria.
It was further learnt that the salary of an average inspector is about N500,000 monthly, described as the lowest in the world.
Checks showed that the salary is five times higher in other countries.
In the United States, it is about $80,000 (N80m) per annum; $60,000 (N60m) per annum in the UK; €53,315 (N58.7m at N1,102/€) in Germany, among others.
Also, airlines in Nigeria pay three times higher than what any aviation agency pays technical staff like pilots and engineers.
Confirming this in a chat with our correspondent, the immediate past director-general, Civil Aviation, Captain Musa Nuhu, said the agency lost technical staff on a daily basis.
During a recent stakeholders’ meeting convened by the Minister of Aviation, Festus Keyamo, the director-general, who was recently suspended, confirmed losing 15 inspectors recently, saying, “The industry is expanding while we are shrinking.”
He said, “The ministry has intervened. It is really difficult and sometimes demoralising. By now we should be talking about another salary increase. We really have to talk to the unions and staff and make them understand. It is unfortunate.
“With the continued support of the Ministry of Aviation, there has been progress with the agencies of government involved, like the Salaries and Wages Commission, but not yet completed.
“My people (inspectors) have a problem with salaries. They are earning N500,000 and the airline pays N1.5m. It is unfortunate. That is the way it is and that is why we need to be removed from that salary structure.
“As at two years ago, Kenya was paying their inspectors $10,000 and they are going to increase it. You pay your people peanuts and you expect them to do magic.”
It was reported that the NCAA has different categories of inspectors, including airworthiness inspectors, flight operation inspectors, ground operation inspectors, cabin inspectors, aerodrome inspectors and airspace inspectors.
But there are only 100 airworthiness inspectors, which are the most critical in providing services to both the existing and incoming airlines, and more than 250 aircraft combined to work with.
A source in the NCAA who spoke with our correspondent on the condition of anonymity said most of the inspectors retired but they were retained, while dozens of them left in search of greener pastures.”
NCAT loses 20 technical staff
At the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), no fewer than 20 technical staff have left for greener pastures over poor pay.
A former rector of the college, Captain Alkali Modibbo, confirmed that agencies and airlines were in ongoing war of poaching technical staff.
He said, “We have the hitch of instructors. The airplanes would be there but we don’t have enough instructors to handle the training. This is so because of our remuneration. The college is a federal government institution and we are paid through the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS), which is a government policy, so you can’t unilaterally change it.
“If the federal government is not ready to increase salaries, there is nothing you can do on your own. But we are trying to see if we can increase allowances for our technical staff, especially flying instructors, engineering instructors, air traffic services and control so that we can retain them.
“We have lost more than 20 technical staff in the last five years to greener pastures. When your salaries and allowances don’t measure up with other colleagues, then people start to look for better places. We need more technical staff to train our students.
“The Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) is suffering the same pain. According to the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), the NAMA is below standard with the air traffic controllers. So, the NAMA comes and grabs our air traffic controllers. The air traffic controllers run to NAMA because the salaries and allowances are four times better than what we can offer here,” he added.
In the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency, described as the most safety critical agency managing the airspace, the Authority has continuously lamented the dearth of air traffic controllers.
The president of National Air Traffic Controllers Association (NATCA), Abayomi Agoro said, “We have acute manpower gaps and the agency undergoes some recruitment exercises to fill out the shortage, but they are yet to be trained.”
Commenting on the challenge, a former rector of the NCAT, Captain Samuel Caulcrick, recalled how he faced a similar challenge as the head of the foremost training institution.
If the wages are okay, some of them would stay. It is always an issue with the salaries and wages commission.
“We have always had that issue. It has always been difficult to retain these key personnel after training them. It happened to me. I left Zaria in 1980, but then, I had to finish my bond before they could allow me to join the Nigeria Airways to fly a bigger aeroplane,” he said.
Also speaking, a former general secretary of the National Union of Air Transport Employees (NUATE), Comrade Olayinka Abioye, said government must stop the japa syndrome in the industry.
He said, “As often said, a disgruntled worker is an accident waiting to happen. This being so, the management and unions (if any) must work together to reduce the number of professionals that may japa through improved welfare benefits.
“Can you imagine a situation where conditions of service, which ought to be reviewed every five years, are yet to be approved after all efforts put into getting them dusted and reviewed? What could be the cause of the avoidable delay? It is a known fact that all the agencies have fulfilled their respective official government obligations by submitting for scrutiny and perusal of their respective financial profiles so that they do not recourse to the federal government for assistance, yet they cannot get this simple thing done.”
The chairman of Air Peace, Mr Allen Onyema, recently called for the removal of the NCAA from the civil service structure to bring about greater efficiency in its operation.
“I am an advocate of taking the NCAA out of the civil service salary structure. The wages being paid by NCAA inspectors are very poor. As a matter of urgency and safety concern, their wage structure should be removed from that of civil service with immediate effect. The NCAA is losing staff, they cannot compete with the airlines in getting the right workforce,” he said. (Daily Trust)
Uncategorized
Three brothers charged with murder after beating mother’s boyfriend to death
Three brothers have been charged with murder in Eswatini after allegedly beating their mother’s boyfriend to death over claims that he was involved in a romantic relationship with her.
The accused — Mlondi Mbuli, 25, Sakhelwe Mbuli, 18, and Lindani Mdziniso, 23 — appeared before the Mbabane Magistrates Court in connection with the killing, which reportedly occurred on June 28, 2026, in Hholoshini, located in the country’s Hhohho Region.
During the hearing, Principal Magistrate Sfiso Vilakati ordered that the three men remain in custody until July 10, 2026, while prosecutors prepare to transfer the case to the High Court, where murder cases are typically tried.
According to investigators, the suspects allegedly attacked the victim, identified as Njabulo Ngwenya, using bricks, stones, sticks, punches and repeated kicks, inflicting injuries that proved fatal.
Police believe the alleged assault stemmed from accusations that Ngwenya was having an affair with the
brothers’ biological mother.

The incident came to the attention of authorities after Sibongile Motsa reported finding her son dead inside her sister’s home in the early hours of June 28.
Court documents state that Motsa discovered Ngwenya’s body at about 1 a.m. before notifying the Royal Eswatini Police Service, which subsequently launched an investigation and arrested the three suspects.
Following their first court appearance, the accused were remanded in custody pending the next hearing and the formal transfer of the matter to the High Court.
Authorities have not disclosed additional information beyond the facts presented during the initial court proceedings.
The case has drawn widespread public interest across Eswatini as investigations continue.
Eswatini, formerly known as Swaziland before Mswati III officially renamed the country in 2018, is a landlocked nation in southern Africa bordered by South Africa and Mozambique. Under the country’s judicial system, serious criminal offences such as murder are generally transferred from the Magistrates Court to the High Court after the initial hearing.
Uncategorized
Gunmen ambush, kill ex-Benue SSG Salifu
Former Secretary to Benue State Government (SSG), Prof. David Salifu, has been killed after suspected armed men ambushed and shot him along the Wukari–Joota Road in Katsina-Ala Local Government Area, LGA, a border community between Benue and Taraba states.
Salifu, a Professor of Public Administration and former Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Federal University Wukari, was reportedly travelling to Makurdi for the burial of his uncle when he encountered the attackers.
He sustained gunshot injuries during the attack and was initially rushed to a hospital in Wukari, where doctors removed bullets from his stomach.
He was later transferred to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Makurdi, but succumbed to his injuries at about midnight on Thursday.
A former aide to the deceased, Mr. Ben Ekah, who confirmed the incident, said Salifu and his driver were returning to Benue from the Federal University Wukari when they were ambushed.

According to him, the driver’s account revealed that the gunmen stopped their vehicle, dragged the former SSG out and attempted to whisk him away.
“The driver said they were coming from the Federal University Wukari where Prof. Salifu lectures when they were waylaid along the Wukari–Joota Road, a border route between Taraba and Benue states.
“The attackers were trying to take him away, and he kept asking them what they wanted. As they continued dragging him, one of them suddenly pulled out a gun and shot him at close range in the stomach.
“They abandoned him after the shooting, leaving him in a pool of blood. His driver, however, managed to take him back to Wukari, where surgeons successfully removed the bullets from his stomach.
“On Thursday, he was referred to the Federal Medical Centre in Makurdi for further treatment, but sadly he passed away around midnight,” Ekah said.
He described the late Professor as a humble and peace-loving man, noting that he had left a Senate meeting at the university to attend his uncle’s burial before the fatal attack.
“He was a lecturer and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Federal University Wukari. We learnt that the university management was holding a Senate meeting, but he excused himself to travel home for his uncle’s burial. It is heartbreaking because everyone knew him as a peaceful man,” Ekah added.
Prof. Salifu served as Secretary to Benue State Government during the administration of former Governor Gabriel Suswam between January 2011 and May 2015.
The Benue State Police Public Relations Officer, DSP Udeme Edet, could not be reached at the time of this report.
Uncategorized
Another batch of 268 Nigerians evacuated from South Africa arrives Lagos
Another batch of Nigerians evacuated from South Africa amid ongoing anti-migrant violence arrived safely at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, on Friday, as the Federal Government continued efforts to bring home citizens affected by the unrest.
The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mrs. Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, disclosed that the Air Peace charter flight conveyed 268 returnees, alongside two officers and crew members, from Johannesburg to Lagos.
According to the minister, the special flight, funded by the Federal Government, departed Oliver Tambo International Airport at 5:36 a.m.
In a statement posted on her X handle, Odumegwu-Ojukwu said President Bola Tinubu had directed that the evacuation exercise should continue despite the expiration of the June 30 ultimatum issued by anti-migrant groups in South Africa.
“The President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR, has directed that the evacuation of Nigerian nationals from South Africa at risk as a result of the ongoing xenophobic protests and attacks continues, even after the deadline of 30th June 2026,” she said.

She noted that three earlier evacuation flights had already brought home nearly 600 Nigerians before the deadline, adding that the exercise remains ongoing for all citizens who voluntarily registered and were duly screened.
“The evacuations remain ongoing. The Federal Government is committed to bringing home safely our Nationals who voluntarily registered to be evacuated and have been duly screened and cleared,” the minister said.
She reaffirmed that protecting Nigerians abroad remains a key priority of the administration.
“Our Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in adherence to that unbreakable bond between citizen and state, remains dedicated to this mandate,” she added, describing the protection of Nigerians overseas as “a central pillar of the Renewed Hope Agenda.”
The evacuation comes as anti-immigrant protests intensified across South Africa, where demonstrators have demanded the departure of undocumented foreign nationals, blaming them for unemployment and pressure on public services.
The latest wave of violence has reportedly claimed at least four lives, while several African countries, including Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Mozambique, have organised voluntary repatriation for their citizens.
The Nigerian government has also indicated plans to engage South African authorities on compensation for businesses and properties abandoned by affected Nigerians.
-
News1 day agoUS releases identities and photos of 124 Nigerians set for deportation
-
News3 days agoEx-Minister Uche Nnaji set for arraignment as ICPC files six criminal charges over alleged certificate forgery
-
News2 days agoI might not be alive to contest in 2027 – Peter Obi raises alarm over threats to his life
-
News3 days agoEnugu Police impound 195 vehicles for Registration and Number Plate violations
-
News2 days agoCourt awards N10m in damages against EFCC for defaming ex-Minister
-
News3 hours agoBREAKING: Kidnapped Oyo pupils, teachers regain freedom
-
News2 days agoYilwatda hails Tinubu’s intervention funds as a promise kept
-
News1 day agoFG raises Soldiers’ Minimum Salary from N49,000 to N100,000 per month — Defence Minister Musa




