The airline is asking the court to award it N1 billion as
general damages, N450 million as special damages and N250 million as exemplary
damages.
The suit was brought before the court pursuant to Order
6(6)(b) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), Order 28 Rules 1 & 2 of the
Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2019, and the inherent jurisdiction
of the court.
Also joined in the suit as defendants are the President of
NLC, Joe Ajaero; the President of TUC, Festus Osifoh; the Sec-Gen. of NLC, one
Comrade Emmanuel Ugboaja and the General Secretary of TUC Comrade Nuhu Toro.
Air Peace is asking the court for a declaration that given
the very sensitive nature of aviation ordinarily, and particularly in the
current climate of pervasive fear of insecurity over long-distance travels
within Nigeria by other modes of transportation, the defendants’ calculated
precipitation of grounding all the plaintiff’s flights throughout Nigeria for
the singular reason that it is responsible for the majority of air-passenger
and goods flights in the country in order to cause substantial nationwide
paralysis, constitutes condemnable sabotage of the national economy and security.
The plaintiffs also asked the court for an order of
perpetual injunction restraining the defendants by themselves, their
agents/servants/privies or otherwise, howsoever, from repeating/continuing the
acts of intimidation and coercion against it.
In documents put before the court, the airline, through
their lawyer, Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chijioke Okoli, stated that on May 3,
2023, its employees on duty were confronted by a noisy mob which invaded their
offices, check-in counters and work areas at the Murtala Mohammed Airport,
Ikeja, Lagos and the Murtala Mohammed Airport Terminal 1 (MM1) premises,
essentially disrupting their work; disorganising and upturning tables,
unplugging and pushing away desktops and personal computers used for employment
by the employees, some of whom sustained injuries in the melee.
The airline also claimed that from the songs they sang and
the instructions that the apparent leaders loudly issued during the disruption,
it immediately became clear that the mob causing the disruptive scene were
members of the NLC and TUC, some of whom got into violent altercations,
injuring some of its customers and staff who voiced their frustrations at the
disruption and frustration of their travel plans by the defendants’ antics.
They also stated that the defendant’s actions had inevitable
ripple effects on their operations in other airports in the country, including
the Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport, Abuja, and Sam Mbakwe Airport, Owerri, all of which
the plaintiff’s scheduled flights could not take off from or land at.
The airline says it later learnt that the defendants, had
some grouse against the Governor of Imo State, Chief Hope Uzodimma, and to
“punish him”, decided upon a total shutdown of Imo State beginning from
Wednesday, May 3, 2023, as was stated among other things in their joint
communiqué of May 1, 2023.
“That Lagos is the operational hub and nerve centre of the
airline operations, and a direct consequence of the defendants’ malicious and
unlawful invasion of its work areas/offices and forcible prevention of its
functions, as detailed above, was the cancellation of its flights billed for
different destinations,” it said.
“Several Air Peace staff suffered physical molestation and
incurred bruises which led to their psychological trauma and hospital
visitations for treatments, with some having to be excused for some days’
absence from work to recover.”
In addition to the financial losses, Air Peace says it has
also suffered a grave injury to its business reputation, not only in the eyes
of its flying customers but also in those of the general public and its
investors.
It said its lawyers wrote letters, dated May 12, 2023, to
the defendants demanding that they promptly make amends for their
unjustifiable, grievous and malicious injuries to it, but which demand they
have disregarded and are instead threatening more disturbance and harm to its
operations.
“That the defendants threatened and intend, unless
restrained by the Honourable Court, to continue to intimidate and coerce the
Plaintiff’s servants and customers and consequentially cause it more harm and
losses,” it added.
Air Peace therefore concluded that the defendant’s conduct
in the circumstances of this suit and leading to its significant losses are
egregiously malicious, scandalous and most deserving of reproach by the award
of general, special and exemplary damages which they put at N1.7bn.