

THEY are still in pains over the loss of their fathers, mothers, children and other loved ones in the June 3, 2012 Dana plane crash.
On Thursday, they kicked and protested the lifting of the suspension Dana Air’s operational licence by the Federal Government.
Their agonies, according to them, is worsened by the fact that the governement did so even when investigations into the crash were yet to be completed and the remains of some of the deceased yet to be buried.
To them, Dana airlines, which they accused of negligence that caused the death of 153 people , should not be allowed to fly its aircraft in the Nigerian air space.
Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah, had on Wednesday announced lifting of the suspension because of “government’s satisfaction with the airworthiness of the airline after rigorous technical, operational and financial audit of the airline.”
Many members of the families of the victims disagreed with the decision.
Obinna, son of the late General Manager, Corporate Affairs of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Dr. Levi Ajuonuma, on Thursday launched an online campaign asking Nigerians to sign a petition seeking boycott of Dana flights.
“Three months after the suspension of their licence, the Federal Government has decided to lift the suspension. The wounded hearts are still bleeding and not being taken into consideration here,” he wrote.
The family of the late Col. Lt. Col. Ochigbo Jumbo, in an interview with The PUNCH on Thursday, said the lifting of the suspension on Dana Airlines, when investigations into the crash had not been concluded, showed the insensitivity of government.
Frank, a younger brother of the late Jumbo, said that the government was toying with people’s emotions.
He said, “The lifting of the suspension of the licence on Dana Air less than three months after the accident shows you the failure of a government which has no feelings for the people.
“We don’t know the criteria they used; the corpses of some victims, numbering about 16, are yet to be identified and they are lifting suspension.
“Even if they are lifting the suspension, the government should have waited for the results of the Accident and Investigation Department for everybody to know if it was the pilot’s error that caused the crash.
“They should have made sure that every family have accounted for the bodies of their relatives. I see the lifting of the ban as a deliberate ploy to insult people.”
Answering questions from newsmen in Abuja on Thursday, Oduah clarified that the licence of the airline was never suspended but that the operations in order to ensure that proper investigation was carried out.
The operation of the airline was suspended after the crash of one of its aircraft on June 3 that led to the death of 163 persons. The lifting of the ban on the airline was announced in a statement by Special Assistant (Media) to the Minister, Mr. Joe Obi, in Abuja on Wednesday.
The minister said, “Our action is based on our satisfaction, after carrying out a technical audit of the operator, that the airline is airworthy.
“While we continue to share in the pain and loss of the families of those who lost their loved ones in the crash, we want to stress that we took this decision with all sense of responsibility.
“Government was not under any pressure to restore the airline’s operating licence and we want to assure Nigerians and the travelling public that safety remains our priority.”
According Oduah, none of the reports on the June 3 accident has indicted the airline, adding that the actual cause of the loss of the two engines of the aircraft may never be known until the Accident Investigative Bureau has finished its work.
She also dismissed insinuation that the lifting of the ban was hasty, adding that it was not usually the practice to ground the operations of an airline whose plane was involved in an accident but added that the step had to be taken because of the sentiments in Nigeria.
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