It may be that Virgin Atlantic owner Richard Branson, may be making good his assertion in 2009 that the airline will pull out of the country as Nigerian Flight Deck has it on some authority that the airline is winding up operations with the sack of all Nigerian crew and personnel in its employ.
Virgin Atlantic, one of the two British carriers that fly directly into Nigeria from London, is said to have only given three weeks’ notice without any severance package to its Nigerian staff regardless of their length of service with the airline.
The report claimed that among its Nigerian staff sacked were 20 air-hostesses, stressing that the airline had in 2014 closed its Nigerian call centre and let go of all the Nigerian staff working in that department.
We tried to contact the Marketing Manager of the airline, Mrs. Kudirat Scott-Igbene on phone, she did not pick or return the call.
As at the time of posting this story, there has been no official reaction from Virgin Atlantic, however the report would be updated if a response eventually comes.
Virgin Atlantic had in 2005 set up a joint venture with the former Virgin Nigeria, but pulled out of the deal in 2009 after some disagreement with the Federal Government.
It would be recalled that the Chairman of the company, Mr. Richard Branson had said sometime in 2012, he was weary of doing business in Nigeria.
He said then, “We fought daily battle against government agents who wanted to daily make fortune from us, politicians who saw the government 49 per cent as a meal to seek for all kinds of favour…watchdogs (regulatory body) that didn’t know what to do and persistently asking for bribes at any point…Nigeria people are generally nice, but the politicians are very insane…that may be irony because the people make up the politicians.
“But those politicians are selfish…we did make N3 billion for the Federal Government of Nigeria during the joint venture…realising that the government didn’t bring nothing to the table/partnership except dubious debts by the previous carrier, Nigeria Airways…The joint venture should have been the biggest African carrier by now if the partnership was allowed to grow, but the politicians killed it…Nigeria is a country we shall never consider to doing business again.”