Corporate News
By MUGAMBI MUTEGI, pmutegi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The delay in loan payments has left hundreds of Kenya Airways’ employees in a difficult position after the banks wrote warning letters to the debtors.
- Kenya Airways said it had alerted its staff of the delay in making the March payments to banks because of the ‘serious cash flow constraints’ that have forced it to prioritise payables.
The depth of Kenya Airways’
financial challenges continued to emerge with Monday’s revelation that
the airline has not remitted to banks money it deducted from employees’
monthly salaries to service loans.
The delay in loan payments has left hundreds of the
carrier’s employees in a difficult position after the banks wrote
warning letters to the debtors.
The pilots have since written to the Kenya Airways
management warning that failure to remit the deducted funds was damaging
their credit-worthiness.
“It has come to our attention that our members are
beginning to receive communication from banks indicating that their
loans are falling into arrears for up to two months,” Ronald Karauri,
the chief executive of the Kenya Airline Pilots Association (Kalpa),
said in a letter to Kenya Airways CEO Mbuvi Ngunze.
“Meanwhile their pay slips continue to indicate
that the money is being deducted by the employer. Kindly have this
rectified as soon as possible.”
Kenya Airways said it had alerted its staff of the
delay in making the March payments to banks because of the ‘serious cash
flow constraints’ that have forced it to prioritise payables.
“It is true that this month, March, the remittances
based on deductions from staff were delayed. This one-off occurrence
was notified to the staff and banks,” Mr Ngunze told the Business Daily.
“In November last year the airline announced a plan
to initiate the process of refinancing the company’s balance sheet.
This means that in the current context of a weak operating environment,
the airline has had to prioritise its payables, including payments for
staff-related deductions.”
The revelation comes just days after Mr Ngunze said
the airline, which posted a Sh10.45 billion loss for the six months to
September, is now paying its workforce of approximately 4,000 employees
through debt.
KQ’s total current liabilities stood at Sh70
billion by end of September last year, a situation that forced the
airline to hire a financial adviser to help restructure its debt.
The airline’s unprecedented action of deliberately
delaying its workers loan repayments as part of the effort to
re-calibrate its finances is a rare pointer to a company navigating a
highly turbulent period.
While KQ insists the failure to remit the monies
happened this month alone, Kalpa insists that the loan funds for some
employees had not been sent since February, terming it “a serious breach
of trust.”
Mr Karauri further states that one pilot had had his credit card suspended since his bank now considers him a risk.
Mr Karuri wrote the letter to Mr Ngunze on March 20
stating that a number of the association’s members had received
communication from banks notifying them of the defaults.
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