June 18, 2026

On Wednesday, June 10, 2026, at 7:43 a.m. a private jet departed Lagos bound for Asaba Airport in Delta State. What should have been a routine thirty-minute flight instead became a horrible aviation misadventure exposing how recklessness could endanger thousands. The aircraft attempted landing at Asaba but missed the runway, triggering a “missed approach” procedure.

The pilot’s correct response demanded immediate execution of a “go-around”—climbing back, circling, and attempting proper landing. Instead, the pilot exhibited behaviour verging on lunacy. He landed directly on the Okpanam-to-Second Niger Bridge bypass road under construction at Ogwashi-Uku, Delta State—a concrete expressway, not an airport runway.

Degrees of madness followed. After landing on the road, the pilot did not call emergency assistance. Rather, he taxied the aircraft along the expressway, then took off from that road at approximately 11:02 GMT—three hours later—returning to Lagos without first obtaining clearance from air traffic controllers. Air traffic control was notified only after the aircraft became airborne.

This brazen violation of Nigerian Civil Aviation regulations constitutes professional misconduct bordering on criminal negligence. The dangers that could have emerged are catastrophic. The road carries vehicular traffic. A collision with vehicles could have killed dozens. The aircraft’s wheels might have failed on the uneven construction surface, causing it to shatter and explode. Fuel lines could have ruptured, igniting a fireball visible from Asaba. Passengers or crew could have been trapped, requiring rescue teams to cut through the fuselage.