a person standing in the desert holding a lantern

AirJustice Africa: About Us

AirJustice Africa empowers victims of aviation safety shortcomings, their families, and airline staff to file detailed formal safety complaints with airlines and aviation authorities throughout Africa.

Aviation accidents occur in Africa, on average, 7 times more frequently than the rest of the world, and the rest of the world is silent. This indifference makes those who experience these safety failures in Africa feel like their voice doesn't matter, and most are even too unsure about how to file a complaint.

AirJustice Africa try to make sure that all these voices are heard. We try to amplify these voices of valid concerns to the aviation industry throughout Africa so that no safety complaint goes unheard.

We try to make the process simple. By providing ready-to-use complaint frameworks, direct contacts, and guidance, AirJustice Africa helps ensure that every valid safety concern is heard, and not ignored.

white airplane under blue sky during daytime
white airplane under blue sky during daytime

What We Do

flying airplane under blue sky

Unreported Tail Strikes

white wall paint with black shadow
white wall paint with black shadow

Brayden Magids: Founder

I have been obsessed with aviation for as long as I can remember. Seeing Sully land his A320 on the Hudson piqued my interest in aviation safety, and ever since, I've kept myself apprised to the world of safety in aviation.

I am also the grandson of Holocaust survivors, and the greatest lesson I learned from these Holocaust roots is the danger of indifference. As Elie Wiesel said, "the opposite of love is not hate, but indifference." That silence, the failure of the world to hear the voices of the few, is more painful than anything else. Nowhere else in the world is indifference more prevalent in aviation (and in general) than in Africa. Aviation accidents are more frequent than anywhere else, yet reporting of these incidents is among the lowest. I saw the connection between the lessons I learned from from Holocaust roots and the situation happening everyday across Africa in aviation. I decided to combine my interests and launch AirJustice Africa, an initiative that ensures no voice is left silent when it comes to aviation safety failures in Africa, leaving the world no choice but to leave behind the indifference that has been happening for so many years.