Foremost Nigerian carrier, Aero Contractors, on Thursday recalled about 69 workers to boost its technical personnel for its Maintenance,
Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facility, which recently started conducting C-check
for Boeing B737 aircraft.
In addition to the recalled workers, the airline is
poised to recall additional 30 in the coming weeks, as airlines queue their
aircraft for checks and as more of its aircraft begin scheduled operations.
Many of these workers were placed on redundancy in
March 2017 as the airline was in dire financial straits and its aircraft were
grounded due to inability to fund their maintenance overseas.
But with its Approved Maintenance Organisation
(AMO) certification obtained from the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA),
Aero has successfully started conducting C-checks which is a high level
maintenance on B737 classic and needed more personnel to do the job.
Aero management disclosed that with the recall of
69 affected staff, 30 more in the coming weeks, 362 workers are still awaiting
their return to the airline, which about a week ago, rolled out the first aircraft
it successfully carried out C-check on and which had already gone back to
service.
In March 2017, Aero management declared no fewer
than 60 per cent of the workers redundant at the peak of its financial crisis
in 2017 after all its aircraft were grounded.
The General Secretary of Air Transport Services
Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (ATSSSAN), Mr. Frances Akinjola, confirmed
the development in an interview with journalists.
According to him, the nine recalled personnel were
members of ATSSSAN while the 19 engineers and pilots belonged to the National
Association of Aircraft Pilots and Engineers (NAAPE) and the other 41 were
members of the National Union of Air Transport Employees (NUATE).
He explained that the current management in Aero
Contractors is laying a solid foundation that would return the airline to its
former glory, stressing that if the management continued with its laid down
plans, very soon, the airline would return bigger and better.
Akinjola commended the management of Aero
Contractors for fulfilling its promise of recalling some of the workers who
were declared redundant in 2017.
He explained that the unions were carried along
throughout the period, noting that the resolve of the unions not to agitate for
the closure of the airline had paid off with the recall of some of the workers.
He also confirmed that the management had assured
the unions that other affected workers would be recalled in batches.
Akinjola also hinted that the current management
had paid all the outstanding salaries of 2017, excluding September to December
of 2016, but said the management of the
airline has assured the unions that all outstanding salaries, benefits and
redundancy packages would be paid in due time.
He said: “We met with the Chief Executive Officer
and management of Aero Contractors towards the end of 2017 and we saw the
intention that they were prepared to start implementing the agreement we
reached at the end of the redundancy exercise that we concluded with them in
2016.
“I believe Aero management will continue to call us
for discussion and we believe that Aero is coming back stronger as envisaged.
Our intention was never to see Aero go down, and that was the reason we decided
to work together with them despite the fact that some of our members felt we
were not doing enough.”
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