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PAP: Second batch of 20 aircraft maintenance engineers commence mandatory training

Another set of 20 ex-agitators from the Niger Delta region have commenced a five-week mandatory training that will lead to their certification and type rating as licensed Aircraft Maintenance Engineers.

A 12-month on-the-job training (OJT) will precede this experience after they successfully graduate from the class course phase of the program.

The beneficiaries are part of the 75 Pilots/Aircraft Maintenance Engineers under the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP) aviation training scheme out of which a first set of 20 Aircraft Maintenance Engineers successfully graduated in October.

Charging the beneficiaries in his goodwill message on Monday in Lagos, Barry Ndiomu, interim administrator of PAP, noted that the flag-off of training for the second batch is another “promise kept” by his administration.

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Ndiomu who was represented by Wilfred Musa, PAP’s head of reintegration, posited that currently, the global aviation industry is expanding at a rapid pace and manpower development is being emphasised by both the industry operators and regulators.

He reiterated that by this specialised program, the PAP has become a critical supplier of strategic manpower to the global aviation industry.

“The PAP is poised to sustain this momentum of creating cutting-edge opportunities for the career advancement of Niger Deltans. He added that it is in line with President Bola Tinubu’s “Renewed Hope Agenda” for the all important Niger Delta region and Nigeria.”

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Ndiomu further charged the beneficiaries to prove naysayers wrong who suggest that the program is a waste of resources, by striving to be the best.

“You represent not just the future of the Niger Delta, but the future of Nigeria and the global aviation industry, the PAP has provided you with all you require to succeed on this journey, what you owe us in return is excellence”, he added.

In a separate remark, Austin Omame, managing director of Alom Aviation Services Ltd, commended the PAP interim administrator for pushing on with the Aviation Resuscitation Program, adding that with their OJT/Type rating licences in their hands, they can secure aviation jobs anywhere in the world.

Onyeama Kingsley, one of the beneficiaries who spoke on behalf of the second batch trainees, promised that they would reciprocate the efforts of the PAP with dedication and hard work.

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