Airforces

(Barré) #1

NEWS


20 // MAY 2018 #362 http://www.airforcesmonthly.com


Africa


Ugandan Huey IIs move to Soroti Angola to


buy three


C295s
ANGOLA PLANS to
acquire three C
Persuader maritime patrol
aircraft (MPAs), it was
announced on March 9.
A presidential order
issued on March 2
authorised the contract,
worth €159.9m, between
Airbus Defence and
Space and local
commodities trading
company Simportex.
Although a budget for
the purchase is yet to
be secured, the Angolan
finance minister has
been authorised to start
negotiating a loan with a
Spanish banking group.
The Persuaders would
be used for monitoring
and surveillance missions
in the country’s exclusive
economic zone (EEZ).

Above: The UPDF Huey II fl eet at Soroti in February. Ruppert Baird
THE UGANDA Peoples’
Defence Force (UPDF)’s
new five-strong UH-1H-II
Huey II fleet has flown to
the reopened Soroti Air
Force Base, the helicopters
being transferred north
from Entebbe on January



  1. Photos of the aircraft
    at their new home reveal
    their identities to be AF
    (ex-US Army 64-13898),
    AF315 (66-16126),
    AF324 (64-16321),
    AF335 (64-17099) and
    AF342 (64-17123).


In August 2016 the US
government’s Federal
Business Opportunities
website indicated the
intention to award Bell a
contract for eight Huey IIs
for Uganda, amended two
days later to five. It was

duly awarded the following
month and all were delivered
last November. A technical
assistance fielding team from
the US was in Uganda to
instruct UPDF maintainers
on the type in January and
February. Ruppert Baird

NAF’s fi rst UAV pilots fi nish in-house training
NIGERIA HAS completed
in-house training of its first
unmanned air vehicle (UAV)
pilots. Five Nigerian Air
Force (NAF) UAV pilots
formally graduated and were
decorated with their ‘wings’
by the Chief of the Air
Staff, Air Marshal Sadique
Abubakar, at NAF Base
Maiduguri in the northeast
of the country on March 2.
Instruction of the new
pilots began in 2016
at 401 Flying Training
School, Kaduna, and in
May last year they began
conversion onto the

Chinese-manufactured
CASC CH-3A armed U AV.
The programme lasted
around two years, and the
CH-3A specifics phase for
ten months, culminating
in check ‘rides’ for each
of the five new pilots.
Each currently has nearly
100 hours on the type.
The NAF is now ready to
train additional UAV pilots
to provide the required
manpower to operate
the NAF’s drone fleet,
which is expected to grow
significantly in the coming
years. Dave Allport

Nigerian Air Force


adds more Do 228s
THREE DORNIER 228s
previously owned by the
Nigerian Immigration
Service (NIS) Air Border
Patrol Unit have been
transferred to Nigerian Air
Force (NAF) ownership
by presidential directive.
Details of the acquisition
emerged on March 15
when the Nigerian Chief of
the Air Staff, Air Marshal
Sadique Abubakar, toured
NAF facilities at Kaduna.
He inspected the three
aircraft, which are being
brought back to operational
condition after a lengthy
period in storage.
The NIS was officially
notified on February 8
that the aircraft were
being transferred to the

NAF. On March 9 last
year, during a visit to the
NIS base at Kaduna,
Minister of the Interior Lt
Gen (ret.) Abdulrahman
Dambazau said the federal
government had resolved
to return the aircraft to
airworthiness, but there
was no mention at that
time of plans to transfer
them to the air force.
The aircraft are 228 -
5N-AUW (c/n 7018) plus
228 -101s 5N-AUY (c/n
7116) and 5N-AUZ (c/n
7167), two of which are
reported to have been out
of service for nearly 20
years. The third, 5N-AUW,
completed a certificate
of airworthiness check in
June 2013 but was then

also inexplicably withdrawn
from use. Extensively
cannibalised during their
long period of storage,
most of the trio’s avionics
and surveillance equipment
have been removed. It

remains unclear why they
were grounded soon after
delivery despite being
completely airworthy and
having fully trained crews.
The NAF is now
upgrading the Do 228s,

reinstalling surveillance
systems and a night vision
capability along with an
area mapping system,
so they can resume their
former role as border patrol
aircraft. Dave Allport

Above: Former Nigerian Immigration Service Dornier 228-100 5N-AUW (c/n 7018) at Kaduna
on March 15. NAF HQ

Above: The fi ve new Nigerian Air Force UAV pilots in front of an armed NAF CH-3A UAV after
their graduation at Maiduguri. NAF HQ
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