BA Boycott Saga
My home internet has been down for a couple of weeks now. Boy, does it feel good to be back!
After a rousing demand for an apology, an investigation initiated by the President and one month later, BA finally ‘apologized’ for the way it handled the March 27 crisis previously blogged with some very interesting and spot on comments.
BA’S RESPONSE
British Airways (BA) has apologised to Nigeria over the maltreatment meted out to Nigerian passengers at Heathrow Airport in London five weeks ago.
A statement issued in Lagos on Thursday by BA Media Consultant, Ademola Adedoyin, expressed “regret (for) the upset that the events onboard the BA75 to Lagos on 27th March have caused in Nigeria.
“We have made it clear that the decision to offload passengers was made in consultation with, and on the advice of, the United Kingdom police; and the sole aim of this decision was to ensure the safety of our passengers, aircraft, and crew.
“Offloading passengers is not a decision that is taken lightly, and is a rare occurrence. However, the disturbance on board the BA75 service to Lagos on Thursday 27th March was a very serious incident which required the presence of 20 uniformed police officers to regain control of the situation.”
Adedoyin added that the commotion made it dangerous to travel on the aircraft.
“Given the level of disruption on board the plane as it was preparing to depart, it was not possible to pinpoint which passengers were the most involved. In addition, our crew was subjected to both verbal abuse and physical assault which, in the confined space of an aircraft, can be a particularly serious issue.
“Hence the police decided, with the agreement of the captain, that it would be unwise to let all the passengers travel on the aircraft as their behaviour could pose a safety risk.
“Of the 133 passengers offloaded following the disturbance 64 re-boarded the flight before take-off. Those offloaded were of various nationalities, including British and American passengers. There was also a mix of nationalities among those who flew, including Nigerian passengers.
“The arrest and detention of one of the passengers involved was a police decision, and is not something that British Airways can comment on. The remaining offloaded passengers were offered overnight accommodation where appropriate, and were re-booked on alternative flights.”
Adedoyi said BA is working with the Nigerian Government to ensure the high standard operations between Nigeria and the U.K. continues.
“British Airways has a long and proud history of serving Nigeria and its people. For over 70 years the airline has flown from the UK to Nigeria, connecting the country to the rest of the world.”
The passenger who spoke up for other Nigerians and the deportee on the flight, Ayodeji Omotade, and others had asked BA to apologise, and to withdraw the six months’ ban on him by the airline.
Outrage over the incident made President Umaru Yar’Adua to order an investigation by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).
[Source: GbengaSesan May 2nd 2008]
Hmm… measly apology or arrogant piece of PR drivel?
If your seventy year old mother starts insulting you and crapping all over your house, you put up with it willingly if all your life she had unconditionally loved and cared for you. You consider it a temporary bit of inconvenience for all her years of devotion and sacrifice. But if all your life she was an absentee mother, that bond just isn’t there; you’ll have no qualms about bundling her off. The same principle applies here, although BA is not a senile old coot and during most of our relationship we supplied the ‘teat’ for their latching on.
BA is flagrantly racist. Heck, even non-Africans have written them off as snobbish and incompetent. The apology does nothing to repair the damaged reputation especially for those who have experienced their numerous ’services’ first hand, as Cxsm wrote in his comment:
British Airways has always gotten away with many atrocious acts against its paying passengers and I can firmly state this because I myself have experienced their racism, maltreatment, extreme rudeness, spraying of insecticides, several damages, losses or missing of my baggages, ruined vacations and business trips, being bumped or left stranded, being stranded overnight at the airport by their extremely rude staff, apart from travelling in their crampy, broken down planes with malfunctioning radios, movie screens, broken chairs, broken food trays, non-working air ducts amongst other undesirable experiences.
For those who are satisfied with an acknowledgement from the carrier and a hint of apology, this doesn’t detract from the reality that the genesis of the upheaval was totally sidestepped. Are Nigerians supposed to stop complaining and feel better because “those offloaded were of various nationalities including British and American passengers”? Though I suspect they were black-British (like Mr. Omotade) and black-Americans.
The fact remains that the security authorities onboard the aircraft used unecessary force to detain a man who obviously had no where to run. For that they offer no explanation or apology. What assurances are there that there won’t be a repeat in future?
They also blamed the forceful removal of Mr. Omotade from the aircraft on the police. This same ‘relevant authority’ that pried a terminally ill cancer patient from her hospital bed and deported her because her visa had expired. It’s very reassuring to know that as a black person it falls to any one of us, at any time, to be used as a tool to exemplify the ugly side to freedom and (dis)respect for human rights.
They stop short of asking us to pay for tickets without flying because that’s what it comes down to; they want our money without having to put up with us.
We’ll wait and see how Ayodeji Omotade’s lawsuit goes…
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