The chief executive officer of Aero Contractors, Ado Sanusi, has admonished intending travellers who have a cold or malaria to stay away from the airport.
Sanusi gave the admission when he featured on Sunrise Daily, a programme on Channels TV on Thursday.
Sanusi said passengers who are seen sneezing on the aeroplane will be isolated and treated as potential COVID-19 patients.
Sanusi said the priorities of airlines was to make sure the aeroplane is safe and conducive for prospective travellers, adding that air travel is the safest means of transportation.
He added that passengers who tendered a doctor’s report stating that they have malaria would not be allowed to board the aeroplane
“I will like to point out that if you have malaria or a common cold, do not come to the airport because there is a high possibility that you are going to be denied boarding,” he said.
“This is the new normal that we are going to see.
“The main thing for the airlines is to make sure that the aeroplanes are safe and that is what we’re doing and that’s why we still believe that air transportation is the safest way to travel.
Also Read: Lagos, Abuja Airports To Resume Domestic Flight July 8
“So if we see anybody sneezing, we will take him as an index passenger, we are not going to he/she has allergies. We are going to take the person as index passenger till we have handed them over to port health officials. They will be the ones to determine if he is allergic or has COVID-19.”
Sanusi said the airline has made arrangements to isolate suspected cases to ensure the safety of all passengers.
“My airline will not allow a passenger that comes with a doctor’s report saying he has malaria I would rather that he comes with a COVID-19 test result that he is free which is only valid for four days,” he said.
“If you have malaria, please sit at home and when you get better, you can travel.”
On speculations that middle seats would be vacant, Sanusi said the airline would only take a decision based on data-driven and backed by science.
“If we have data that shows that if we block the centre seats, it will reduce the rate of transmission then we will do that and increase the flight costs because somebody must pay for the centre seats.,” he explained.
The airline boss also said the airline would no longer serve in-flight meals as passengers would have to remove their face masks to eat such.
“There won’t be serving of food because that will increase the number of times you will be contacting passengers and then the passengers would be removing their face masks to eat the food so I think it is not the best,” he explained.
“It is a one hour flight. It is only in Nigeria that we serve food for a one-hour flight. Go anywhere in the world and you will see that hot meals are not served on one-hour flights.”
Hadi Sirika, the minister for aviation, announced on Wednesday that domestic flight operations will resume at the Lagos and Abuja airports on July 8.
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