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Transportation

₦712bn Lagos Terminal Rebuilding Funded With Subsidy Removal Gains – Aviation Minister Keyamo

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Sunday August 3, 2025
TheNewsDESK |

By Idorenyin UMOREN

The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, has defended plans by the Federal Government to remodel the Terminal One of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos with ₦712bn, saying it is a quest to meet world-class standards.

The Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, who was a guest on Channels Television’s Sunday, August 3, Politics programme, said the airport terminal, built over four decades ago, has gone rusty.

“The roof of the airport is leaking; the place is decrepit and smelly. You see people selling Indomie and all kinds of kiosks erected there. The ceilings are failing, and the carousels are not working because their parts are not in the market anymore,” he said.

The approval of ₦712bn by the Federal Government for the project last week has triggered discontent from various quarters as critics argued that it was a misplacement of priority.

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But, Keyamo argued that the airport upgrade would be funded “through the Renewed Hope Infrastructural Funding. It is not a budgetary kind of expenditure. It is from the special infrastructure fund”.

“This government promised Nigerians major infrastructural upgrades across Nigeria, from the savings we are having now from the subsidy removal and the floating of the naira,” he stated, adding that the project would last 22 months.

The minister said that without the rebuilding of the airport terminal, many foreign airlines would abandon the country’s route.

“Without this, some international airlines will threaten to stop flight to your country when you don’t have a good airport, a good runway, because it affects insurance because when the runways are not good, the terminals are good, the insurance will go up because they will say that place is not safe to fly to,” he said.

Keyamo stressed that upon completion, the terminal would rival continental aviation hubs in Ethiopia, South Africa and other country.



He said, “As it is today, you cannot land in Lagos (local airport) and try to connect to an international flight, maybe to Ghana.

“Lagos is not a hub, but that was the plan in 1977 when it was designed and in 1979 when it was commissioned. You cannot process one passenger from one terminal to another, so that has stunted the growth of aviation.

“What we are trying to do in Lagos now is to make Lagos a very modern airport and create a proper hub to begin to compete with other hubs in Africa…So, we want to completely pull down Terminal One.

“It is not a refurbishment; we are tearing it down, only the pillars will remain, the carcass, the decking. Everything will go, and they are going to redesign now.”

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