Pondering over the Emir of Kano, Air Peace tango this week, I
couldn’t help but remember the wisecrack by Sarah Churchwell, the 51-year-old
professor of American Literature, who wrote: “People who are given whatever
they want soon develop a sense of entitlement and rapidly lose their sense of
proportion.”
That
is exactly what is happening in this contrived hullabaloo.
For those not aware, the story is that the Emir of Kano, Aminu Ado Bayero, who was returning from Banjul, Gambia, missed his early morning flight from Lagos to Kano.
It
was neither the monarch’s fault nor that of Air Peace airline. His flight from
Gambia to Nigeria was delayed, which impacted on both his arrival time in Lagos
and ability to board the 6.15 am Air Peace flight from Lagos to Kano.
Knowing
the chairman of the airline, Allen Onyema, the Emir’s cousin, who doubles
as his Chief Protocol Officer, Isa Bayero, called to request a delay of the
flight. But that was not possible because as at the time his call came through,
boarding had been concluded, doors shut and the aircraft was already taxiing on
the runway.
Air
Peace dutifully gave Isa Bayero the situation report and offered to put the
Emir and his nine-man entourage on the 7 am flight to Abuja and from there to
Kano at the airline’s expense.
But
the royal entourage would have none of that. How dare the airline refuse to
abort the 6.15 am flight, knowing full well, in their words, that a Very
Important person (VIP) and his entourage were not yet on board? They threatened
fire and brimstone and promised there would be consequences if the flight
didn’t wait for the Kano royalty, which they portrayed as a “disrespect to the
emir and the people of Kano State.”
It didn’t matter to them that there were scores of passengers in
the aircraft who will vicariously suffer if the flight was aborted.
When
the flight left without the Emir, Isa Bayero complained to the Nigerian Civil
Aviation Authority (NCAA), seeking punitive actions against Air Peace while
making very portentous threats.
Alarmed,
the airline bent backwards and issued a statement through its Chief Operating
Officer, Toyin Olajide, debunking the allegation of disrespect to the Emir.
Mrs.
Olajide narrated what happened thus:
“We
want to state the true facts herein: From the telephone log evidence on the
phone of our Chairman/CEO, Allen Onyema, Mr. Isa Bayero called our chairman at
about 5.52 am, at a time he was still sleeping.
“From
the same log, it could be seen that Isa called him again at 5.59 am. This call
woke him up and on seeing that it was Isa Bayero calling, he took the call.
“Isa
told our Chairman that he and the Emir of Kano had just landed the Murtala
Mohammed International Airport Lagos from Banjul, Gambia and would be
proceeding to Kano same morning. He told the chairman to delay our first flight
of the day, the 6:15 am Lagos-Kano flight for him and the Emir with another
eight persons.
“It
was not true that our Chairman refused flatly. He rather told Mr. Isa Bayero to
give him a few minutes to call the airport to find out the status of the
flight. I was the one he called. To show his desire to help, he called me
immediately and intimated me with the request.
“I
am the Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Air Peace. I quickly called the local
airport from where we carry on our day to day domestic flight operations and
was told that the aircraft had since finished boarding and was almost taxiing
out.
“I
quickly called Mr. Isa Bayero with this information and I expressed our desire
to put him, their entourage and the Emir of Kano on our 7.00 am Lagos-Abuja
flight and that on landing in Abuja, we would then put him on our flight going
to Kano at no cost to them. Mr. Isa Bayero refused this offer; he insisted that
the already taxiing aircraft should be stopped and delayed until the Emir and
the other eight persons arrive from the international airport.
“At this point, as stated earlier, Isa Bayero and the Emir of
Kano had just landed at the international wing of the airport, this means they
would still need to go through Immigration, get their baggage and, of course,
clear with Customs before entering the morning Lagos traffic to get to the
local wing of the airport. This would mean that the passengers in the plane ready
to depart would have to wait in the plane for nothing less than an hour.
“So
the decision was then to fly them from Abuja to Kano still in the morning
considering the next flight from Lagos to Kano was for 7:00 pm. How this became
a disrespectful action by Air Peace baffles us.
“After
explaining this to Isa Bayero, he threatened he would incite the people of Kano
against the Airline if we did not stop the flight.”
And
that was exactly what he did. Rather than Mrs. Olajide’s succinct explanation,
which I consider a needless mollification of a bully with an exaggerated sense
of entitlement, assuaging Prince Bayero’s ego, he became more recalcitrant and
doubled down on his threat.
“I
am giving an ultimatum of 72 hours for Air Peace to tender apologies to the
Emir, first in national daily and secondly to come down in person to the Emir,
or else, we would not hesitate to go extra miles to correct the misnomer,” he
thundered.
This
is the height of impudence. Who is Isa Bayero, for crying out loud, to give an
ultimatum to a fellow citizen, who has committed no crime known to the laws of
the land?
But
he was not done yet. “We can go any length to defend and protect any act of
insensitivity against our prestigious traditional institution. That insult is
not heaped on the Emir alone but on the good people of Kano and folding our
hands on this could trigger something worse and more ridiculous.
“I
wrote to the DG NCAA, to complain but if someone claimed my statement is
inciting, well, they are entitled to their opinion. But come to think of it,
inciting who, Kano people because the airline insulted their emir and the
airline refused to apologise? I have no regret if anybody claims or interprets
my complaint that way.”
He
wouldn’t bother if any harm befalls the Airline or Onyema himself because as he
put it, “After all, Air Peace has been in business before coming to Kano and
Kano people have been flying across the world without Air Peace. So if that is
what he wants, so be it. We will get there.”
Sadly,
you would come off with the impression that this “prince of Kano,” a
professional pilot who “has flown five heads of state,” was talking to his
houseboy, other than Allen Onyema, a lawyer and entrepreneur, who rescued,
literally, the country’s aviation industry from total collapse. This is a case
of undiluted hubris walking on all fours.
But
do you blame him? He is drunk on unmerited privileges. Isa Bayero and his ilk
have developed narcissistic personality traits, a sense of deservingness or
being owed a favour. The tragedy is that they have done little or nothing to
deserve the special treatment they claim as a right.
In
any other country, Isa Bayero would have been invited by security authorities
over his reckless utterances that can further breach the already fragile peace
in the land. But that will not happen. This is Nigeria and he is a prince of
Kano, a blue blood.
But
this “you owe me” attitude has become insufferable. Bayero’s sense of
entitlement, the belief that he deserves a special treatment or recognition is
beyond the pale. The penchant to inconvenience others without thinking, which
is what this is all about is part of the reason why Nigeria is where it is.
Will
the Igwe of Nnewi, Obong of Calabar, or the Ooni of Ife, for instance, threaten
Max Air or its chairman, Dahiru Barau Mangal, because the airline refused to
delay a flight that is already taxiing the way the Emir of Kano is threatening
Air Peace and Onyema?
Rather
than inciting the notorious Kano mob against Air Peace, a private business,
will it not be better if the Emir goes to court if he feels his right has been
violated, or better still boycott the airline since there are alternatives?
I
hope Onyema doesn’t apologise because Air Peace committed no crime. It is high
time Nigerians, particularly Ndigbo, challenged some of these inanities. Nobody
has the monopoly of violence.
If
the people of Kano say they don’t want Air Peace in their state again because
one of its aircraft refused to apply the brakes as a molue would do in order to
massage the ego of royalty, the same idiocy that destroyed Nigeria Airways, so
be it.
*Amaechi is the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of TheNiche (ikechukwuamaechi@gmail.com)
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