Ruqayya Suleiman from Bakori LGA of Katsina State has become the first
female pilot from the state. She is one of the 15 pilots trained in South
Africa under the full scholarship programme of the Petroleum Trust Development
Fund (PTDF) as international certified commercial pilots.
According to Raqayya's father, her dream of becoming a pilot could not have come true without the scholarship and emotional support from the PTDF.
According to Raqayya's father, her dream of becoming a pilot could not have come true without the scholarship and emotional support from the PTDF.
Today,
a joyful Mr. Suleiman is excited that his young daughter has broken the
cultural barrier that often hold girls from her region back from acquiring
higher education.
The Executive Secretary of PTDF, Femi Ajayi, explained that the
aim of the scholarship is to create capacity for the Oil and Gas sector and
that with the support of President Goodluck Jonathan and the Minister of
Petroleum, Diezani Allison-Mudueke, the agency is fulfilling its mission.
Helicopter pilots are key professionals in the Oil and Gas
sector.
Corroborating the Executive Secretary, the head, Industry
collaboration Unit of the PTDF, Barrister Timipre Wolo said before the
establishment of the agency, the industry was dominated by expatriates.
“The country needed to build its indigenous capacity to make sure
it fills up the available vacancies.
“Mostly, oil and gas activities in Nigeria are offshore and even
those onshore; one has to fly to the locations because of the terrain of the
Niger Delta. So helicopters became the major means of transportation,” she
said.
Another beneficiary of
the scheme, Angel Odumodu from Port Harcourt in Rivers State said he was
shocked when he got the call from the
PTDF. “I wasn't expecting it but now I am a pilot and the
whole family is excited”.
Also Ogoromsi Apiri from Ogbia in Bayelsa State, a beneficiary,
said he had always been curious to know how jets and helicopters fly, but
that his dream of becoming a pilot seemed impossible when his father died. But
the PTDF came to his rescue with the scholarship.
From Kaduna is 18 year-old Tosin Ajibola, an indigene of Kwara
State who is one of the 20 children of his father with four wives.
He said: “I wanted to be a pilot but I realized
it will cost me between 12 to 20M Naira to study abroad. My father who has 20
of us to take care of would not be able to afford the cost, so I told myself
that I may has as well let go the dream”.
Today, he is grateful to the scheme that has made him Nigeria’s
youngest pilot.
And from Zaria in Kaduna
State is Jesuleke Elizabeth Babatunde, an indigene of Ondo State who disclosed
that she and her husband had searched on-line a fruitlessly for such a
scholarship until PTDF offered her the lifeline.
With the success achieved with
this first batch, Mr. Ajayi, PTDF's Executive Sectary believes that this is a
dream come true for the trainees as the agency has given them a rare
opportunity to improve their lives
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