By Louis Iba

THE Accident and Investiga­tion Bureau (AIB) is seeking an upward review of tickets sales tax paid by airlines in the country from the cur­rent five per cent to 10 per cent.

Commissioner/CEO of AIB, Dr. Felix Abali, who stated this in Lagos yester­day also appealed to the Fed­eral Government to exempt technical personnel from the current embargo it has placed on foreign training.

According to Abali, ac­cident investigation done by the AIB, for instance, is a specialised technical area that requires special training which can only be obtained overseas.

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The government had said that embargo on overseas training and international travels was one of the cost-saving measures introduced following recent develop­ments in the international oil market, which have af­fected the revenue stream of government.

Abali, who spoke yester­day at the AIB’s headquarters at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, MMA, Lagos, dur­ing the visit of the House Ad- Hoc Committee on Non-Oil Revenue and Remittances, said since the directive was announced by the Head of Service, technical person­nel in the nation’s aviation industry have not been able to embark on foreign train­ing to boost their technical knowledge.

He said it was important that government also in­creases the five per cent tick­et sales charge paid by air­lines to 10 per cent to boost funding to key aviation para­statals, stressing that paucity of funds has prevented the AIB from carrying out its du­ties as a responsible accident investigator. The AIB, it was learnt, gets about 3 per cent out of the 5 per cent tickets sales tax.

Abali said the AIB as parts of its succession plan required special funding to operate and hoped that the House of Representative Committee would use its good offices to push for the upward review of the ticket sales charge for the agency.