The European Commission has barred a Nigerian carrier,
Med-View Airline, from operating in its airspace over safety concerns.
The
airline is one of those under the EU Air Safety List Annex A, which have been
banned from operating in Europe.
A
total of 181 airlines were prevented from flying into Europe, with 174 airlines
barred due to safety oversight by aviation authorities in their home countries.
The
EU Air Safety List is a list of non-European airlines that do not meet
international safety standards and are, therefore, subject to an operating ban
or operational restrictions within the European Union.
In
the updated version, all carriers from Benin Republic and Mozambique were
removed from the list, while four individual airlines, one each from Nigeria,
St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Ukraine and Zimbabwe, were added.
Med-View
said in a statement signed by its Executive Director, Business Development and
Commercials, Mr. Isiaq Na’Allah, on Thursday that the ban was not as its
Lagos-London flight remained unaffected and that it had since been operating on
the route with its wet-leased aircraft.
According
to the airline, the ban falls under exception rule in EASA, Annex A, which
states that air carriers listed in the annex can be permitted to exercise
traffic rights by using wet-leased aircraft of an air carrier, which is not
subject to an operating ban.
“There
is no basis for alarm as the Lagos-London flight remains unaffected. We at
Med-View Airline are committed to safety, and currently working with EASA and
the NCAA to restore normalcy,” Na’Allah said.
He
added that the airline had on Wednesday, May 17, 2017 operated its normal
schedule flight to London.
Na’Allah
stated, “It will be recalled that in March 2016, Med-View Airline passed
through one of the most stringent operations audit of the global airlines’
body, the International Air Transport Association, after which it was issued
with the International Operational Safety Audit.
“The
airline has secured a B777 aircraft leased from an EU-member state to boost its
international operations, which will soon join the fleet.”
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