Author: INVESTIGATION: Commissioned by Buhari, Nasarawa’s ₦15 billion airport joins Nigeria’s white elephant projects. Posted On: 3 months, 1 week ago
Blog Category: Academics
Built on a 1,000-hectare expanse of land, the Lafia Cargo Airport was touted as a transformative project for Nasarawa State’s solid minerals and agricultural sectors. But three years after its grand commissioning, the runway sees no aircraft, the terminal lies silent, and the entire facility stands abandoned, left to rot.
The crumbling perimeter fence, surrounded by overgrown grasses, tells the story of a facility forsaken by humans and now overtaken by rodents and reptiles. This is the tale of the ₦22 billion Lafia Cargo Airport.
When PREMIUM TIMES visited the site on a scorching afternoon in January, the plainclothes security officer at the gate appeared startled by the sight of a vehicle approaching—an indication that visits to the airport are far from routine.
This airport is not just another white elephant project; it represents a dashed hope for many who gave up their land in the belief that the airport would transform their lives.
“Of course, I was very excited that November morning in 2015 when His Excellency, Tanko Al-Makura, announced the airport project in Lafia,” said Mohammed Abubakar, a trader living less than a kilometre from the site.
To Mr Abubakar and many others in surrounding communities who sacrificed their land for the project, the abandoned airport symbolises wasted opportunity and broken promises. The former governor had pledged that the airport would bring jobs and economic growth worth their sacrifice.

“We were all happy about the development. That land belonged to us. I owned about seven hectares of it. We wanted development for our community and looked forward to the job opportunities the cargo airport would bring for our children,” the 63-year-old Mr Abubakar told PREMIUM TIMES. “It has been 11 years since the project was conceived and three years since the commissioning, yet the airport remains in a sorry state.”
The question on everyone’s lips: Why is the airport abandoned?
To answer that, PREMIUM TIMES visited the airport multiple times between January and July 2025 to assess its current status. We also accessed and reviewed public and private records to evaluate the financial elements of the airport project.
In 2015, the administration of then-Governor Al-Makura signed an agreement with a Chinese firm, Tongyi Group Engineering, to construct the airportunder a Public-Private Partnership (PPP). The firm was to provide 75 per cent of the total project cost.
However, the procurement process was mired in allegations of opacity, with the government failing to disclose the contract’s terms. Less than a year after the project began, the state government terminated the contract without explanation. It remains unclear how much the government paid or how much the firm invested.
PREMIUM TIMES submitted a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the state government for the contract details, and a similar request was sent to the Chinese firm.
The state government ignored the request in violation of the FOI Act. However, Tongyi Group, through its solicitors, responded, stating that the contract had been terminated on 10 November 2016 and therefore declined to provide further details.
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PREMIUM TIMES later discovered that the project had been re-awarded to Triacta Nigeria Limited, the same company responsible for the controversial Gusau International Airport. Again, the state government failed to disclose contract details or costs.
PREMIUM TIMES sent an FOI request to Triacta, requesting documentation on funding, contract agreements, and project scope. The company responded with a letter detailing its role in the project. It indicated that it had been fully paid for the contract and had completed the project.
According to Triacta, the initial contract was worth ₦6.45 billion for the construction of a 2.2km x 45m runway, a 150m x 30m taxiway, a 70m x 70m apron, access road and parking, crash road, and full perimeter fencing. However, the response made no mention of the previous contractor’s contributions.







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