This comes a day after Dubai’s Emirates airline said it would suspend all flights to the African country from September 1 due to blocked funds.
The flag carrier of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) disclosed this in a statement on Thursday, citing the inability to repatriate its earnings in foreign exchange from Nigeria.
Last month, Emirates asked Hadi Sirika, minister of aviation, to support the repatriation of its revenue, amounting to $85 million. Nigeria is facing a forex exchange crisis and this has seen the naira depreciate against the dollar.
The carrier said it had made “considerable” efforts to initiate dialogue with relevant authorities for an urgent intervention. According to IATA, the amount blocked from repatriation by the Nigerian government grew to $464 million in July.
“This is airline money, and its repatriation is protected by international agreements in which Nigeria participates,” Kamil Alawadhi, IATA’s Regional Vice-President Africa and the Middle East, told Gulf News in a statement.
“IATA’s many warnings that failure to restore timely repatriation will hurt Nigeria with reduced air connectivity are proving true with the withdrawal of Emirates from the market,” said Alawadhi. “Airlines cannot be expected to fly if they cannot realize the revenue from ticket sales.”
No comments:
Post a Comment