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Concession of airports by FG causes anxiety among aviation workers

The FrontierThe FrontierFebruary 13, 2026 956 Minutes read0

The various unions operating within Nigeria’s airports are in a dilemma over the latest federal government’s policy on concession of the facilities.

The unions are appealing for the injection of private sector funds into the facilities and their upgrading, reports ThisDay.

At the same time, the unions are trying to ensure that the welfare of airport workers is not jeopardised under the present federal government’s policy.

Since President Ahmed Bola Tinubu’s administration, unions have toned down their combativeness about this issue because they seem to believe in the way the federal government is going about the whole process.

But on Friday last week, some aviation workers at the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, embarked on industrial action, protesting the concession of the airport to Aero Alliance without explicit clauses on the future of the workers of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN).

Their suspension of work led to the disruption of flight operations, which left passengers stranded.

Social Secretary of the National Union of Air Transport Employees (NUATE) Enyili Ezekwesili said issues concerning workers must be addressed before Aero Alliance could take full management of the airport, or the workers would be forced to protest again.

“What happened during the protest was a carry-over from what transpired on Wednesday. Last week, our national presidents gathered in Enugu to inform the government that the signing of the concession agreement in Abuja did not go down well with FAAN workers, particularly the labour unions.

“We were part of the committee because the Minister of Aviation requested that we be included. We attended one or two meetings, during which we raised the issue with the minister, stressing the need for the national leadership to tour the airports and hold congresses with the workers. The minister agreed that the idea was a good one, Ezekwesili said.

Ezekwesili further said: “However, before we knew what was happening, the agreement was signed, even though labour-related issues concerning the workers had not been properly addressed. We objected, stating that it was not the best approach and that we needed to raise our voices to let the minister know that the issues had not been fully discussed or finalised. For that reason, we believed there was no justification for the signing to take place at that time.

“The assurance we have received is that by next week, the minister will convene a meeting to identify how the errors can be corrected. As long as there is no handover, we have no issues until our 21-day notice expires. However, if any meeting is held or any action is taken regarding the concession agreement, including the concessionaire coming into the airport to carry out activities, we will return to the point where we stopped.”

The minister had already agreed to meet with the unions on the concession of the Enugu airport. The meeting was initially slated for February 17, but was later shifted to February 21.

On January 22, 2026, the Ministry of Aviation and Aerospace Development disclosed that it had formally signed the concession agreement for the Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, with Aero Alliance as the concessionaire.

The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, emphasised the transparent approach the Ministry adopted in the concession programme, describing the handover as the conclusion of a painstaking and transparent process that began some time ago.

“Today is the end of a very long and tedious process regarding the concession of the Enugu Airport. The process culminated on the 31st of July, 2025, when the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approved the proposal to concession the Enugu Airport, subject, of course, to contract.

“We did these agreements with the rights and privileges of workers uppermost in our minds. Let me say today that we have fully respected and preserved the rights of aviation workers. They have not been retrenched, their terms and conditions of employment have not changed in any way, and they remain workers of the federal government and FAAN,” Keyamo said.

After reviewing the activities and processes of his predecessors in the concession programme, Keyamo rejigged the process to make it more transparent and more open, thus throwing away the opaque process that made former efforts to concession the airports very unpopular.

The plan was that five international airports, including Lagos, Abuja, Kano, Port Harcourt and Enugu would be given out in concession.

The minister stated, however, that no fixed duration has been established for the concessions, but assured that the process would be transparent, and no jobs would be lost.

The assurance that no job would be lost is the major challenge the unions are facing now. In the concession agreement that gave Aero Alliance Enugu airport, the welfare of the workers was not explicitly stated. For example, the condition that must be met before they are disengaged and what the severance package would be were not clearly defined.

A staunch member of the National Union of Air Transport Employees (NUATE), Comrade Shola Idowu, told our correspondent that the unions would not allow any airport to be released to concessionaires until the welfare of the workers under the new arrangement is concretised.

He said that whatever would be agreed on would be the term that would be used in future concessions of Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt, and Kano airports.

“The unions still stand their ground that the concession must include the welfare of the workers, what will be the fate of the workers under the concessionaire. We are not defiant this time because the Minister is a responsible man and knows what he is doing. I know that he will resolve the problem. Discussions are already on the dialogue table. The fate of the workers must be defined before any airport is given out to a private investor. This is paramount. If there is no agreement, you cannot force the workers out. I am hopeful that the unions will sit down with the Minister and resolve this problem,” Idowu said.

Our correspondent also spoke with the Secretary General of the Association of Nigerian Aviation Professionals (ANAP), Abdulrasaq Saidu, who said that the unions were still insisting that workers’ welfare must be put into consideration beforea concession agreement is signed between the federal government and the concessionaire.

“Labour issues must be discussed before the concessionaire takes over Enugu airport,” he said.

He also frowned at the piecemeal concession arrangement embarked on by the federal government, saying that this raises eyebrows, suggesting that the government should face the programme and finish it in one fell swoop by concessioning the five major airports at the same time.

“The concession is piecemeal. They are supposed to be done together. They know what they are doing. They are after government money (revenue). After the huge amount of money spent on airport renovation, you said you want to concession them,” Saidu said.

He threatened that labour may escalate issues if an amicable resolution is not reached in the meeting slated for February 21, 2026.

Saidu said what the unions really wanted was a situation where the government concedes the airports by grouping viable and unviable airports so that the viable airport will buoy the unviable ones, like concessioning Lagos airport with Ibadan and Akure, Abuja airport with Jos and Yola and so on.

But from all indications, that choice may not be revisited because the government has already moved on and would not stop at the infancy stage of the arrangement.

 

 

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