A former Vice Chairman, National Association of Nigeria Travel Agencies (NANTA), Chief Segun Adewale, has urged the Federal Government to protect travel agencies from alleged extortion by airline operators.
Adewale, the Chief Executive Officer of Aeroland Travels Limited, made this appeal in a chat with newsmen in Lagos on Thursday.
NANTA is the Umbrella body of all travel agencies operating in Nigeria.
“If this travel agency doesn’t have the capacity, by now, our businesses would have been destroyed. This is how they are killing businesses.
“I am talking on behalf of those whose businesses have been killed. The airline is fleecing businesses on flimsy rules,” he said.
Adewale said that the money in dispute at the moment is about N69.49 million.
He called on the International Air Transport Association (IATA) saddled with the responsibility of regulating travel and aviation industry in Nigeria, to put a stop to all practices capable of pushing travel agencies out of business.
According to him, as an IATA licensed travel he said: “We can issue ticket originating from anywhere in the world from Nigeria. I can make a booking in Ghana or America and write the ticket in Nigeria with my licence.
“All IATA licensed travel agencies have the liberty to issue tickets for airlines operating in Nigeria from anywhere,” he said.
According to him, because Nigeria’s dollars policies in 2023, some foreign airlines blocked their inventory such that travel agencies was not able to book in the country, but open access in Nigeria’s neighboring countries like Ghana.
He said that the airline wanted to sell in dollars but could not tell Nigeria government, hence blockage of their inventory and taking of their market out of Nigeria.
“So, because Aeroland Travels has office in Ghana, we do booking in Ghana on Turkish airline. The airline didn’t restrict us then that we should not issue their tickets.
“It was funny that about a year after we have issued tickets on Turkish airlines from outside Nigeria (Ghana) during this period, and payment made, the airline started sub-charging us, saying we could not issue such tickets from Ghana.
“The airline didn’t complain after one week, one month, nine months after the tickets were issued neither did it block the system because everything was automated not manual.
“We kept fighting back and forth until the money was reduced to about N60 million through an invoice captioned “invalid charges”.
“This kind of action is indirectly killing travel agencies and businesses in Nigeria.
“So many travel agencies have left the businesses and been killed by foreign airlines due to unfounded charges, debits and invoices for minor offences,” he said.
Reacting on the development, the President of NANTA, Mr. Yinka Folami, who noted that the body would soon arrange a meeting between the aggrieved and the airline, said NANTA would continue to ensure good relationship with airlines.
Folami said: “We have intervened and we are optimistic we will find a good solution to the issue.
“The CEO of Aeroland Travels Limited, Mr Adewale, feels aggrieved at some penalties that were applied on him by the airline. Luckily, the representative of the airline in Nigeria is also a reconciliatory person.
“There are penalties that are issues by the airlines but the rules that guide us allow us to contest the penalty.
“There is room for reconciliation and intervention and we are already intervening and optimistic that we will find something amicable,” he said.
Meanwhile, efforts to get comment from the top official of Turkish Airline in Nigeria didn’t yield any results as the Nigerian representative said: “I couldn’t get feedback yet from my head office.
“However, if you would like to check the Turkish Airlines debit memo/booking regulations you may visit our website,” the official said.