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How Arik Passengers Hijacked 4 Aircraft

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Details have emerged on how passengers who had booked their flight with Arik Air, Nigeria's biggest private airline, hijacked four passenger planes in protest against delayed flights on Sunday.

Witnesses at the Abuja Airport where the incident happened, said the passengers got enraged after they were delayed for several hours without any explanation from the airline management.

The passengers were supposed to fly from Abuja, the nation's capital, to Sokoto and the flight had been scheduled for 8am. However, at 3pm, the scheduled flight was yet to take off.

A passenger, Cedar Chinwuba, who released information about the incident, said following the delay, another aircraft was provided, but just as the plane was about to take off, the pilot announced that the flight had been cancelled and dropped the passengers at the Tarmac.

Chinwuba, who was billed to fly from Abuja to Lagos, said: "no management of Arik airline came to address the incident. The man identified as the chief security officer of Arik airline was seen very far from Tarmac.

The passengers were said to have decided that no plane would fly since they could not fly. As a result, they stopped four aircraft, two of which were fully loaded with their engines already switched on.

The passengers in the four aircraft were later asked to disembark for security reasons. Some of the flights later took off late Sunday.

A staff of an agency at  the airport confirmed the incident telling Huhuonline.com that no one could go close to the angry passengers as there was fear they could descend on airport officials.

Before the incident, several passengers have complained bitterly about Arik Airline's lack of good customer relationship.

"On two occasions this year, I have been delayed and there was nobody I could run to," Victor Ajayi, an Information Technology consultant based in Lagos, told Huhuonline.

"In January, I almost missed an appointment in Abuja after a delay that lasted for five hours."

Ajayi was at the airport when the issue began.

"I was coming to Lagos from Abuja and got to the airport in the afternoon to meet the protest," he said.

"The passengers split themselves standing in front of aircraft and preventing them from moving on the tarmac.

"We could not but share in their plight and support them because there was no way we could move," he said while tasking the government to always take complaints from passengers seriously adding that while the protest lasted, there was no government presence at the scene of the incident.