The national carrier, Kenya Airways, has played an important role in making Kenya a regional economic powerhouse.
However,
its past could come back to haunt the country with a Sh600 billion
claim made by former employees of the defunct East African Airways
Corporation (EAAC).
The airline is a breakaway of the
East African Airways Corporation which closed shop following the
collapse of the East Africa Community in 1977.
Following
the airline’s dissolution, EAC member states negotiated an agreement
for the division of assets and liabilities, which they signed in 1984.
It
is the disbursement of these benefits however that has become the
subject of a court case in which the former employees of EAAC are
demanding more than Sh600 billion.
If the ruling,
scheduled for Thursday, goes in favour of the employees, the country
will be required to part with an amount equivalent to a third of this
year’s national budget.
The EAAC collapsed on January
13, 1977 and all its workers were declared redundant on February 15,
1977. This led to the birth of Kenya’s national carrier, Kenya Airways,
which was established in January 1977.
Since then, KQ
has played a central role in Kenya’s economic evolution, connecting the
country to the rest of Africa and the world.
Today,
Kenya is the preferred gateway to Africa due to its deep integration
with the rest of the world. This feat could not have been achieved
without the role played by the national carrier.
A
study released by Visa last week revealed that Nairobi is the most
strategic city for multinationals eyeing the African market.
KQ
flies to more African cities than any other airline on the continent
while most of the international carriers make stopovers in Nairobi en
route to other destinations in the region.
It is
therefore incumbent upon the company’s management to ensure that the
airline, which is currently grappling with financial challenges, does
not follow the route of its predecessor, the East African Airways
Corporation.
Runaway insecurity
In
the half-year through September, the airline reported a loss of Sh10
billion. The airline blamed the poor performance on escalating
insecurity in the country as well as the outbreak of Ebola in West
Africa.
Haunted by the memories of the East African
Airways, KQ’s shareholders at the annual general meeting told the
company’s management to steer the airline to profitability.
KQ has now contracted financial advisers to help it get out of the current mess by restructuring its debt.
A
treaty for the establishment of the EAC was signed in Arusha on
November 30, 1999 and it was implemented on July 7, 2000 following the
conclusion of the process of its ratification and deposit of the
instruments of ratification with the secretary-general by all the three
partner states.
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