/ May 16, 2026
/ May 16, 2026

The president did not buy a new jet, but a refurbished jet – Onanuga

Published on

By

The Presidency has revealed that President Bola Tinubu acquired a refurbished, not a new jet, for his official duties.

Tinubu’s spokesman, Bayo Onanuga, issued the explanation when he was featured on Channels TV’s Inside Sources, anchored by Laolu Akande.

Onanuga said some jets in the presidential fleet, like a 19-year-old Boeing B737-700 purchased under ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo, are all in inadequate condition, and their maintenance costs were outrageous.

READ ALSO:

Three presidential jets up for sale

Hence, instead of spending a bogus amount of money on aircraft maintenance, the President sought the approval of the National Assembly for a refurbished jet still in excellent condition.

He revealed that the new presidential jet belongs to Nigeria, as Tinubu will not take it with him when he leaves office.

Onanuga said: “The president did not buy a new jet; what he has is a refurbished jet—it has been used by somebody else before he got it, but it is a much newer model than the one President Buhari used. President Obasanjo purchased the jet that President Buhari used approximately 20 years ago.

“There was a time the President went to Saudi Arabia; that plane developed some problems, and the President had to leave with a chartered jet to The Netherlands. It’s not President Tinubu’s plane; it belongs to the people of Nigeria; it is our property.”

You May Like

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

Most Popular

Must Read

Court orders FCCPC to shut Coscharis Motors over defective Range Rover sale

Court orders FCCPC to shut Coscharis Motors over defective Range Rover sale

A Nigerian court has ordered the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) to seal the operations of Coscharis Motors after the company allegedly failed to comply with directives linked to the sale of a defective Range Rover vehicle to a customer. According to TheCable, the ruling followed a legal dispute in which the customer accused the luxury automobile dealer of supplying a faulty Range Rover and failing to provide satisfactory remedies. The court reportedly directed the FCCPC to enforce compliance by shutting down the company’s premises until the matter is resolved. The judgment is seen as another major test of consumer protection enforcement in Nigeria’s automobile sector. The FCCPC has increasingly intensified actions against companies accused of violating consumer rights in recent years. Earlier cases involved sanctions and enforcement actions against firms in sectors including pay television and real estate. Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission has not publicly released full details of the enforcement process at the time of reporting.
Read more

Editor's Pick

Trending News

Newsletter

Enter your email address and receive notifications of news by email.

You have been successfully Subscribed! Ops! Something went wrong, please try again.

© 2026 GongNews. All Rights Reserved.