Appeal Panel Upholds NCAA’s N33.5M Sanction on First Nation, Pilot

Appeal Panel Upholds NCAA’s N33.5M Sanction on First Nation, Pilot


The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) has announced that a five-man appeal panel has upheld and reaffirmed the civil sanctions imposed on First Nation Airways and one of its pilots by the agency over infractions for which the airline was penalised N33.5 million.

NCAA made this known on Sunday in a statement signed by its spokesman, Sam Adurogboye, and said the upholding of the sanction was contained in the report submitted by the panel to the regulatory authority at the conclusion of the sitting.
The agency explained that First Nation Airways had earlier filed an appeal following a Letter of Sanction written to the airline on January 23, 2017, and recalled that violations were detected during a ramp inspection on the airline’s aircraft, Airbus A319 with registration mark 5N-FNE, on November 8, 2016, at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA), Abuja.

“After the exercise, it was discovered that the Pilot-in-Command (PIC) was not in possession of a current medical certificate. In addition, the airline similarly the Pilot was added on the roster to carry out operational flights when obviously his medical certificate had expired.
“Therefore, the airline and the pilot violated Parts 8.4.1.5(a), 8.14.1.2(1), 8.14.9.4(a) (1) and 8.2.1.8(a) (24) of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Regulations (NigCARs) 2015. Consequently, in accordance with IS 1.3.3. (1)(14) of the NigCARs 2015,the airline and pilot were fined N32 million and N1.5 million respectively being moderate civil penalty for the violation,” the statement said.

The agency noted that the airline swiftly filed an appeal in disagreement with the reported violations and sanctions and NCAA in a bid to be fair constituted an appeal committee to hear the airlines appeal.
According to the statement, “The five-man appeal panel had three airline operators, a private legal luminary and NCAA officials as observers. First Nation Airways was represented by four Lawyers, the pilot and three management staff. After four days of sitting, submissions and deliberations the panel upheld and reiterated the applicable sanctions meted out to the airline and its pilot.


“It arrived at the following conclusions in agreement with the NCAA findings prelude to the application of sanctions. The ATRL 1874 License of the Pilot in Command of First Nation Airways had expired on November 2, 2016. The PIC was not in possession of the licence during the ramp inspection on November 8, 2016. The PIC did not have a valid licence and was not properly certified from November 2 to 8, 2016.”

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