PRESS RELEASE
Air Peace Aircraft
Air Peace Limited has strongly refuted the allegations contained in
a recent publication claiming that the airline sold tickets to Jamaica and
subsequently “dumped” passengers in Barbados.
The airline in a Press Statement signed by its Management, says
the report is misleading, inaccurate, and does not reflect the actual facts
surrounding the incident.
Air Peace confirms that all tickets were sold strictly in
accordance with international airline sales practices and applicable aviation
regulations.
"At no point did the airline engage in deceptive sales or
intentionally mislead any passenger regarding their travel arrangements,"
says the airline.
During standard pre-departure profiling and documentation checks
at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos, Nigeria, Air Peace said
it discovered that some passengers did not possess the required transit visas
to travel via Antigua to their final destinations, including Jamaica, Trinidad
and Tobago. In compliance with regulatory requirements, it immediately offered
the affected passengers a full refund of their tickets.
While some passengers accepted the refund option, others
voluntarily requested to be rerouted through Barbados to their final
destination, noting that Nigerian passport holders do not require transit visas
to travel through Barbados to Jamaica and beyond.
Based solely on this voluntary request, Air Peace said it
facilitated the rerouting.
"In total, 42 passengers freely and expressly have their
tickets rerouted through Barbados to their final destinations. No passenger was
forced, coerced, or compelled to travel to Barbados."
"Due to an unforeseen operational delay, the passengers
arrived in Barbados later than scheduled and consequently missed their onward
connections. Unfortunately, the onward tickets originally purchased were not
honoured by the airline with whom they intended to travel with. This refusal by
the airline to airlift the passengers left them stranded in Barbados.
"Also, some of the passengers who tried to book hotel
reservations via credit cards had their transaction declined, hence no evidence
of confirmed hotel accommodation during their stay. Another concern from the
Barbados immigration was passengers with a return date of December 31st, 2025,
indicated that they would be returning back to Nigeria months later with no
alternative means of travel. This is obviously unacceptable. The Barbados
immigration authorities exercised their sovereign mandate to assess each
passenger individually and on a case-by-case basis. This is beyond Air Peace's
obligation," the airline said.
Air Peace noted that 67 other passengers from the same passenger
group were granted entry and allowed to continue their journeys through
Barbados, while 25 passengers were denied entry because of the stated concerns
raised by the Barbados immigration authorities.
The airline reiterates that it did not abandon, dump, or
deliberately inconvenience any passenger. The airline acted responsibly,
transparently, and in good faith at all times by offering refunds, facilitating
voluntary rerouting upon passenger request, providing on-ground assistance, and
ensuring the safe return of affected passengers.
"We remain committed to the highest standards of
professionalism, regulatory compliance, and customer care."
The airline urges responsible journalism and encourages media
organisations to verify facts with relevant stakeholders before publishing
reports that may misinform the public.
Credit Air Peace PR
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