Home » Legislature, Senate » Senate Directs Foreign Airlines to Remit 5% Surcharge

Senate Directs Foreign Airlines to Remit 5% Surcharge

The Senate Committee on Aviation yesterday at the public hearing on air fare disparity, directed all foreign airlines to pay back the five per cent of all Passenger Fuel Surcharge (PFS) to the federal government, insisting that the claim of ignorance on the part of the airlines was not excuse enough.

The committee had slammed the directive following the acceptance by the airlines that they had defaulted by not paying the five per cent statutorily required from all ticket sales.

They claimed ignorance of any aviation law which requires them to pay such percentage on ticket sales.

But according to the Chairman of the committee, Senator Hope Uzodinma, he said the federal government has been deprieved of its statutory payments by  the non-payment of the levy by the airlines.

He further directed the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority(NCAA) to immediately commence the recovery of the taxes from the airlines as soon as possible even as some committee members added that the refusal to pay the money amounted to tax evasion and should be treated as a financial crime.

“It is the opinion of this committee that the government is entitled to the five per cent of the PSF charged by the foreign airlines.”

He maintained that the PFS as revenue accruing to the airlines is taxable since it usually appeared in their account books as a major revenue source.

Although the airlines had argued that the PFS was charged by the airlines to cover for the cost of aviation occasioned by global increases in crude oil, the committee noted that the airlines never reflected in the value of the PFS any fall in the price of crude in the international market.

However, the foreign airlines, especially British Airways, Air France and KLM, advised the country to establish a national airline as a step towards boosting the aviation industry, adding  that Nigeria should be able to run a national carrier despite the fact that some smaller African countries own national airlines with difficulty in management.

On the 5 percent charge, the General Manager of Air France-KLM Nigeria, Mr. Christian Herpi, said they were ready to comply with any extant Nigerian law requiring the airline to pay 5per cent from the PFS.

In same vien the British Airways Country Manager, Mr. Kolawole Olayinka, had also argued in the same line, assuring that it was ready to comply with the directive, provided it is a clearly spelt out  legal requirement.

-Leadershipwp_posts

Related Posts

Website Pin Facebook Twitter Myspace Friendfeed Technorati del.icio.us Digg Google StumbleUpon Premium Responsive

Short URL: https://newnigerianpolitics.com/?p=20199

Posted by on Apr 18 2012. Filed under Legislature, Senate. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Leave a Reply

Headlines

Browse National Politics

Featuring Top 5/1475 of National Politics

Subscribe

Read more

Browse Today’s Politics

Featuring Top 5/64 of Today's Politics

Browse NNP Columnists

Featuring Top 10/1573 of NNP Columnists

Browse Africa & World Politics

Featuring Top 5/2468 of Africa & World Politics

Subscribe

Read more

ADVERTISEMENT

Categories

FEATURED VIDEOS

Advertisements

ARCHIVES

March 2026
S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

© 2026 New Nigerian Politics. All Rights Reserved. Log in - Designed by Gabfire Themes