Nigerian Airline Restarts Once-Monthly 777 Caribbean Flights — Threatens Critic For Calling It Unworkable

Nigeria’s Air Peace will restart once-monthly flights from Lagos, Nigeria to Antigua and Barbados starting May 24 using a Boeing 777.

Sean Mendis says Air Peace has threatened to sue him for questioning the wisdom of this service. I’ve known Sean for more than 20 years, when we co-moderated the Delta Air Lines forum together on FlyerTalk. He’s former COO of Ghana’s Africa World Airlines and he wrote on LinkedIn,

Once monthly service doesn’t support any sort of tourism or business connectivity, unless the business in question is human trafficking.

The airline argues this service makes sense based on “previous ad-hoc charter flights to Antigua and Barbuda in 2023 and a landmark Lagos-Montego Bay charter flight to Jamaica operated in 2020.” A single ‘landmark’ charter flight six years ago. There were some services beyond this. And it’s just… weird.

There’s not a lot of traffic West Africa and the Caribbean. So daily or even Saturday-only service would bleed horribly. So the one thing that monthly service has going for it is fewer flights means losing less money.

  • Monthly service doesn’t work for round trips, most vacations, any sort of business travel, emergencies, or really anything.

  • It can work only for passengers leaving or returning on the day it’s scheduled, and flying another carrier in the other direction. (And that means losing any airfare benefit from a roundtrip.)

  • A Boeing 777 is a lot of aircraft for this!

Fixed costs also can only be spread across a handful of passengers and flights. Even where most local airport functions are completely outsourced, there is still regulatory work, sales and distribution, handling contracts, airport and government coordination, catering, security, local supervision, baggage and cargo processes, disruption planning, and customer support. Even where each of these gets outsourced they need to be set up and monitored.

Operationally, once-monthly service is a problem. What happens during irregular ops? A single flight diversion or cancellation? It appears that on one flight Air Peace sold Jamaica tickets but changed the flight’s destination to Barbados and left passengers there, refusing refunds to those who did not or could not travel there (only acceding to refunds after pressure from their regulator later it seems).

Nobody does anything like this for a reason. I went looking for any examples of it, and the best I came up with for monthly long haul is St Helena – Ascension, which is a charter paid for by employers on Ascension Island. Booking priority goes to their employees, with remaining seats sold to the public.

Ascension Island is isolated in the South Atlantic Ocean, 960 miles from the coast of Africa and 1,400 miles from South America. It’s part of the British Overseas Territory of Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha, and Saint Helena is 800 miles away. It has no native or permanent civilian population. Anyone there is from somewhere else, working on the island (or with someone who is).

Air Peace operates Boeing 737 and 777 aircraft as well as Embraer regional jets, with a total of 29 planes in its fleet. Their Boeing 777 fleet consists of ex-Emirates, Singapore, and Japan Airlines planes. Eight years ago they planned to fly to Houston but that never happened. In 2022 they created an alliance with other airlines in Nigeria in order to try to gain official sanction for collusion and price-fixing.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

More articles by Gary Leff »

Comments

  1. I’m assuming the lawsuit is about him accusing them of human trafficking, not criticizing their business plan.

  2. @Mantis – there’s no lawsuit. They are just trying to make their usual threats to silence any critics.

  3. Ok the *threat* of a lawsuit. What, are you a child rapist? See, I’m just criticizing you, no big deal.

  4. Your ticket comes with an option to collect one-half of a $500,000 legal settlement — all you have to do is send them a $500 processing fee and your bank account information.

  5. @Sean M. — That’s a shame. No one should be suing to silence others in this way. Even if we disagree sometimes, I am pleased to read your perspectives on here and elsewhere. Keep going!

    @Mantis — Technically, there are still libel laws in-effect in many jurisdictions. Like, if Sean wanted to track you down and sue you for implying he’s a child rapist, he could. Now, you could argue that your comment was clearly in-jest, but, still, anyone can sue anyone for anything, it just might not amount to much or be worth the effort, but sometimes it is. And, perhaps, if Sean, hypothetically, was overly aggressive, launching countless frivolous lawsuits against you and others, he could be deemed a vexatious litigant, and maybe you could counterclaim for damages, like to get your attorneys fees from your defense covered. Who knows! Anything is possible! Dream big!

  6. @retard
    Seriously, you are literally retarded. Even mid single digit IQ would understand what I was saying and that me saying that implied he also committed libel. But whatever, you’re a retard, and pretty sure that’s not libel because it’s established fact

  7. @1990 – I actually welcome the lawsuit if they want to go there. The 2024 market size between Nigeria and Barbados was a total of 393 passengers for the year, or around one passenger every other day. In 2025 that increased to around one and a half passengers a day. You could fill the annual demand on a single 777 flight. Unfortunately, even this demand is severely directional with approx. 40% of passengers flying into Barbados not returning on their booked return flights. There has been evidence in the past of multiple groups of travelers on Africa to Caribbean direct flights being eventually apprehended at the US southern border attempting to cross, or being found elsewhere in the region working without appropriate documents or even attempting to make asylum claims. I have provided evidence in criminal prosecutions against some of the organisers of these flights, and I have also written and spoken extensively on this subject. If anyone wants to litigate the veracity of my statements, there is no way that they will prevail as I have the evidence.

  8. @Sean
    The point is companies often make bad business decisions. That’s the free market, and that seems to be your only defense. Of course this route has no commercial chance of success. But accusing them of hunan trafficking is the issue, don’t pretend it isn’t.

  9. @Mantis – have you actually read my original statement that they took objection to? Or the actual demand for retraction that they made?

    I’m not going to engage any further with this discussion here.

  10. @Sean even if what you say is ‘true’ there was no need to even mention human trafficking at all

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *