Tuesday, August 26

Allen Onyema: The Man Who Lifted 55 Million Lives & Rewrote Nigeria’s Aviation Story

In a nation often defined by extraction and exclusion, Allen Ifechukwu Onyema chose elevation. Born in 1964 in Benin City, the first of nine children, he rose from squatting in Oshodi to charting Nigeria’s skies with Air Peace—West Africa’s largest carrier. A lawyer by training, a peacemaker by calling, and an entrepreneur by necessity, Onyema’s life is a masterclass in moral grit.

His defining moment wasn’t the founding of Air Peace in 2013, but a decision made decades earlier. In 1990, fresh from law school, Allen Onyema walked away from a guaranteed oil job at Shell to pursue law and peacebuilding. That decision—rooted in conviction rather than convenience—would later expose him to the hardship of trekking from Marina to Iddo in search of work. It was his first flight against gravity. His uncle, Capt. J.O.W. Onyema, had helped secure the Shell (SPDC) position. By declining it, Allen chose legacy over luxury, purpose over proximity. He had a lifeline, yet chose the long road.

What sets Onyema apart is not just his business acumen but his refusal to separate profit from purpose. He named his airline Air Peace not for branding, but as a continuation of his lifelong crusade for ethnic harmony. His Eminent Friends Group, founded during university, became a national movement for nonviolence. When xenophobic attacks erupted in South Africa in 2019, Onyema didn’t wait for government intervention—he deployed his Boeing 777s to evacuate over 600 Nigerians, free of charge. That act cost him over ₦280 million, but earned him something rarer: the trust of a nation.

Yet his journey has not been without headwinds. In 2019, U.S. authorities indicted him for alleged financial misconduct—a storm that could have grounded lesser men. Onyema responded not with evasion but with transparency, asserting his innocence and continuing to expand Air Peace’s reach. Under his leadership, the airline now flies to London, Dubai, Johannesburg, and São Paulo, with a fourth Boeing 777 added to the fleet this August.

His vision is clear: to democratize air travel, disrupt foreign monopolies, and make Nigeria a global aviation hub. “I don’t have any apologies to any country for being pro-Nigerian,” he declared—a line that should be etched into every boardroom wall.

President Tinubu’s administration has recognized this audacity. Through the appointment of Festus Keyamo as Minister of Aviation, policies have shifted to favor indigenous carriers. Onyema credits this alignment with enabling dry lease access and reducing airline mortality. Air Peace, he insists, is not a family business—it is a national project. According to Travel and Tour World, the airline has lifted over 55 million passengers since inception, becoming a vessel for dignity, employment, and national pride.

In Onyema’s world, altitude is more than a measure of flight—it is a metaphor for moral aspiration. He is not merely building an airline; he is scripting a new chapter in Nigeria’s imagination, where legacy is measured not by wealth, but by the lives lifted. If Nigeria ever needed a Cullinan—a rare gem of clarity, courage, and conviction—it has found one in Allen Onyema.

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