DR. WISDOM ENANG DECLARES MAY 2 AKWA IBOM’S INTERNATIONAL REBIRTH DAY, COMMENDS GOV. UMO ENO ON INAUGURAL INTERNATIONAL FLIGHT FROM VICTOR ATTAH AIRPORT
SAMPSON ENYONGEKERE, UYO
An internationally recognized policy strategist and Adjunct Professor at the University of North Dakota, USA, Engr. Dr. Wisdom Patrick Enang, has described May 2 as a defining inflection point in the economic and aviation history of Akwa Ibom State, characterizing the commencement of international flight operations from the Victor Attah International Airport as the State’s “International Rebirth.”

Dr. Enang, a globally respected energy expert and Fellow of both the Nigerian Society of Engineers (FNSE) and the Nigerian Institution of Safety Engineers (FNISafetyE), while congratulating Governor Umo Eno, described the milestone as a methodically executed aviation breakthrough anchored on technical excellence, institutional coordination, and investment-grade execution discipline.
He further noted that the development is structurally anchored on the Federal Government’s approval in November 2025, which formally conferred international operational status on the Victor Attah International Airport, following a sequenced process of technical validation, regulatory compliance verification, and infrastructure readiness certification consistent with global aviation benchmarks.
According to the erudite scholar and governance strategist, the successful inauguration of the maiden international flight from Uyo to Kotoka International Airport, Ghana, represents far more than an aviation achievement. Rather, it signifies a structural recalibration of Akwa Ibom’s economic positioning within the West and Central African regional space.
“History rarely announces itself in spectacle; it announces itself in precision.
What we are witnessing in Akwa Ibom today is the outcome of deliberate planning, disciplined execution, and leadership that understands that infrastructure is only as powerful as the intelligence behind its delivery.”
Expatiating further, Dr. Enang observed that global empirical evidence consistently validates the catalytic relationship between international aviation connectivity and regional economic expansion. He referenced widely recognized development indicators from the International Air Transport Association and World Bank studies, which affirm that improved air connectivity accelerates GDP growth, enhances trade efficiency, and strengthens foreign direct investment inflows in emerging economies.
Within this context, the economic egghead described the commencement of international flight operations at the Victor Attah International Airport as a strategic unlocking of latent economic value, effectively reducing historical dependence on external aviation gateways while repositioning Akwa Ibom as a direct participant in global mobility and commerce networks.
“Connectivity is not merely physical; it is economic sovereignty. When a subnational economy gains direct access to global air routes, it fundamentally redefines its development velocity.”
Speaking further, the Akwa Ibom-born, British-trained Chartered Engineer commended Governor Umo Eno for what he termed a rare demonstration of governance precision, particularly in the seamless alignment of aviation infrastructure readiness, regulatory compliance, and institutional synchronization across customs, immigration, security, and aviation authorities.
He stated that these outcomes were achieved through a carefully sequenced infrastructure upgrade programme, including modernization of terminal facilities, enhancement of navigational aids, reinforcement of airfield lighting systems, and resolution of critical operational and regulatory requirements necessary to attain full international aviation certification standards.
He further observed that the successful activation of international operations at the Victor Attah International Airport reflects a governance model rooted in de-risking principles, phased validation, and technical compliance, all of which are hallmarks of infrastructure systems capable of attracting long-term global capital and institutional confidence.
“Bankable infrastructure is never declared; it is proven. What distinguishes visionary leadership is the ability to translate engineering ambition into operational credibility without compromising global standards.”
Dr. Enang further highlighted the integrated nature of the development, emphasizing its alignment with Ibom Air expansion, road infrastructure connectivity, tourism development, and emerging industrial clusters. According to him, this reflects a deliberately structured economic architecture designed to ensure that the commencement of international flight operations at the Victor Attah International Airport operates not in isolation, but as a central node within a broader development ecosystem.
“Aviation infrastructure without industrial linkage is structurally incomplete. What is unfolding in Akwa Ibom through the commencement of international flight operations at the Victor Attah International Airport is the orchestration of an economic ecosystem where air, land, industry, and services converge into a unified development logic.”
“This trajectory is reinforced by ongoing expansion within the state’s aviation portfolio, including the scaling of Ibom Air’s fleet capacity through additional CRJ 900 Bombardier aircraft and Airbus A220-300 aircraft, strengthening operational depth and regional competitiveness.”
He noted that globally benchmarked aviation economies such as Dubai, Singapore, and Addis Ababa achieved transformational outcomes not through airports alone, but through deliberate integration of aviation infrastructure with logistics systems, commerce ecosystems, and coordinated urban development frameworks.
He also underscored the symbolic and strategic significance of the inaugural flight to Accra, Ghana, describing it as a renewed bridge for bilateral trade expansion, tourism exchange, and regional economic integration within West Africa.
“The first international departure from Uyo is not just a flight; it is a statement of repositioning. It signals Akwa Ibom’s transition from peripheral participation to active integration within global aviation and trade corridors.”
The Ethical and Attitudinal Reorientation Czar further emphasized that the ongoing Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) facility represents a forward-looking strategic investment designed to position Akwa Ibom as a regional aviation servicing hub with the capacity to generate foreign exchange inflows, reduce capital flight, and stimulate high-value technical employment.
He also observed that the Aviation Village project reflects a long-term strategic vision aimed at creating an integrated aviation ecosystem encompassing training institutions, accommodation, logistics support systems, and ancillary aviation services, reinforcing the airport’s role as an economic anchor.
In a reflective submission, the globally respected policy reform advocate cautioned that aviation infrastructure of such magnitude requires patience, sequencing, and sustained policy discipline, stressing that its economic returns are cumulative rather than immediate.
“Strategic infrastructure does not yield instant gratification; it delivers generational dividends. Its true value is measured not in inaugural flights, but in the ecosystems of trade, tourism, logistics, and industry that evolve over time.”
He further commended the coordinated efforts of all stakeholders involved in the commencement of international flight operations at the Victor Attah International Airport, noting that the alignment between federal aviation authorities, contractors, and state institutions reflects a maturing governance ecosystem capable of delivering complex infrastructure to global standards.
In further reflection, Dr. Enang emphasized human capital development as a central pillar of sustainability, referencing ongoing investments in aviation training, including pilot training, aeronautical engineering, and international exposure programmes such as the Airbus Flight Academy in France, designed to align local competence with global aviation standards.
In the same vein, Dr. Wisdom noted that the progress recorded in Akwa Ibom’s aviation sector has continued to attract commendation from the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Barrister Festus Keyamo (SAN), which he described as an important external validation of the state’s steadily emerging aviation competitiveness and institutional maturity.
In his concluding remarks, the multiple excellence award winner affirmed that May 2 will remain etched in the developmental consciousness of Akwa Ibom State as the dawn of a new economic era defined by international connectivity, expanded opportunity structures, and strategic global relevance.
“Akwa Ibom has not merely launched an international flight; it has repositioned itself within a new economic orbit. This is not the culmination of a journey, but the commencement of a more globally integrated future.”
He expressed firm confidence that with sustained policy continuity and strategic infrastructure alignment, the Victor Attah International Airport will evolve into a critical aviation and logistics hub within the Gulf of Guinea, firmly positioning Akwa Ibom State as a dominant gateway for trade, investment, and regional connectivity, while driving inclusive prosperity, trade expansion, and long-term regional competitiveness.
