Inspection of facilities at VAIA by officials…recently.
By Lucy Daniel
There are moments in the life of a state when infrastructure quietly becomes destiny. The ongoing activation of the international status of the Victor Attah International Airport (VAIA) is one of such moments for Akwa Ibom State, and, indeed, for Nigeria and Africa.
With the State Government’s high-powered committee, inaugurated by Governor Umo Eno, moving decisively towards an April take-off date for international flights, Akwa Ibom is standing on the threshold of a profound economic shift. This is not just about planes crossing borders; it is about jobs, trade, tourism, industrial confidence and the deliberate alignment of infrastructure with the ARISE Agenda.
International airports are not symbols; they are systems. Wherever they exist and function optimally, from Dubai to Addis Ababa, from Istanbul to Kigali, they become engines of growth. They shorten distance, reduce transaction costs, attract capital and reposition cities as hubs of opportunity. Akwa Ibom is now poised to enter that league.
The economic importance of international flights from VAIA cannot be overstated. For businesses, it means faster access to markets, easier movement of executives, investors and professionals, and a reduction in the cost and time of logistics. For exporters, it opens new routes for agro-products, seafood, manufactured goods and services. For investors, it sends a clear signal: Akwa Ibom is open, connected and ready.
Tourism stands to gain immediately. Akwa Ibom’s coastline, culture, cuisine and hospitality industry have long been under-marketed, not for lack of appeal but for lack of access. An international airport removes that bottleneck. Tour operators, conference planners, diaspora visitors and leisure travelers can now consider Akwa Ibom not as a detour, but as a destination. Hotels fill up, transport services expand, local artisans thrive, and the creative economy finds new markets.
Beyond passenger traffic, the presence of a Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facility elevates VAIA from an airport to an aviation ecosystem. Globally, countries that host functional MROs, such as Ethiopia, Singapore and South Africa, save billions in foreign exchange, build highly skilled manpower and attract airlines from across regions. For Nigeria, which currently spends enormous sums sending aircraft abroad for maintenance, an MRO in Akwa Ibom is a strategic economic intervention.
For the state, the benefits are layered. An operational MRO creates direct employment for engineers, technicians, safety inspectors and aviation specialists. It also stimulates indirect jobs in training, logistics, power, security and services. For young people, it opens pathways into high-skill, high-value careers. For Africa, it contributes to regional aviation self-reliance.
This is where the ARISE Agenda finds concrete expression. Governor Umo Eno’s development philosophy, anchored on economic growth, infrastructure, human capital and inclusive prosperity, comes alive when projects move from plans to platforms. The internationalisation of VAIA is not an isolated aviation project; it is an economic strategy. It aligns with enterprise development, tourism expansion, job creation and the strengthening of Akwa Ibom as a regional hub.
Equally important is the governance approach behind this effort. The multi-sectoral inspection led by the Secretary to the State Government, Prince Enobong Uwah, alongside key actors from justice, finance, aviation, Ibom Air and infrastructure agencies, reflects coordination, accountability and seriousness of purpose. These are the less visible but critical ingredients of sustainable development.
History shows that airports shape cities. Cities with international gateways grow faster, trade more, and integrate better into the global economy. If managed with discipline and vision, VAIA can become to Akwa Ibom what Schiphol is to Amsterdam or Bole International is to Addis Ababa, a catalyst for national relevance and continental connection.
As April approaches, the conversation should move beyond celebration to stewardship. International status brings opportunity, but also responsibility: safety, efficiency, transparency and continuous investment. With the leadership direction already set by Governor Umo Eno, and the ARISE Agenda providing the policy compass, Akwa Ibom has a rare chance to get it right from the start.
When Akwa Ibom takes off, it will not only be aircraft that rise. Trade will rise. Tourism will rise. Jobs will rise. And with them, the confidence of a state deliberately positioning itself for the future.
#AkwaIbomRising #VAIATakesOff #ARISEAgenda #JobsGrowth #GlobalConnect
Daniel, SA to the Governor on Media, writes from Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. providencemaga@yahoo.com
