THE BIG CONSPIRACY
THE TRAVAILS OF A PROGRESSIVE SAFETY REGULATOR IN A NOT- SO-PROGRESSIVE AVIATION INDUSTRY
by
Book Details
About the Book
Aviation safety is of global concern. This book is about one person's experience as a non-hypocritical safety regulator in a challenging environment. The author has found her amazing career experience interesting to share. The hazards of playing politics and being hypocritical with safety regulation are clearly reflected in this book. From the human angle, it shows the ugly face of office politics and power play and their detrimental effects on those at the receiving end. The rather slow pace of progress in the aviation regulatory entity since the author's ordeal and her subsequent forceful retirement is a lesson in why responsible authorities shouldn't be cutting their noses to spite their faces.
About the Author
Born on the 9th June 1953 into the Saba Chieftaincy family of Lagos Island, Nigeria, Folasade Odutola had as paternal grandmother, a gifted woman from the house of Gbonka, the renowned Ife warrior. Her maternal great, great, grandmother was a daughter of King Dosunmu of Lagos. Her father was a banker who had previously had a go at boxing, law enforcement duties and tutoring, even if only for a brief period of time. With a teacher-cum-seamstress as mother, education was and remains a most valued commodity in the family. After enjoying the free good-quality primary education available in her time, her academic performance made it possible for her to obtain scholarships for further studies up to undergraduate level. In 1977, she obtained a first-class BSc (honours) degree in aeronautical engineering from Glasgow University, Scotland, UK. Her professional career began with a one-year compulsory national youth service, which she performed in the Development Section, Engineering and Technical Services Department of Nigeria Airways, the defunct national-flag air carrier. Her post-graduate education was later sponsored by her employer, the Federal Ministry of Aviation (FMA), which she joined in August 1978 as a pupil airworthiness surveyor. She obtained an MSc in air transport engineering from Cranfield Institute of Technology (now a university), Cranfield, England, UK. She served the FMA and its parastatals for over two decades, performing regulatory duties covering safety and economic aspects of aviation, with more than 80% of her years in service spent on safety matters. She rose to the post of Director, Airworthiness and Operations Standards at the inception of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority, which she was forced to leave in July 2001. In January 2004, she was appointed to the post of Rector/CEO of the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology in Zaria, Kaduna State. She left this post in May 2007 to take up an appointment (on secondment) as Director, Air Transport Bureau at the International Civil Aviation Organization Headquarters in Montreal, Canada. Her secondment from the Federal Civil Service came to an end in November 2011.