Corporate News
Crew of the Lufthansa cargo plane Boeing 777F receive a warm welcome
after landing at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport last year.
PHOTO | DIANA NGILA
By MUGAMBI MUTEGI, pmutegi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The German airline had initially said it would be making the eight-and-a-half hour flight to Jomo Kenyatta International Airport on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays, with the addition of a Friday flight between December 11 and January 30, 2016.
- The airline now says it will operate three weekly flights (Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday) until April when it will formally introduce the A340-300s as earlier envisioned.
German airline Lufthansa has scaled down its planned
re-entry into Kenya later this month, cutting down on the number of
flights and size of aircraft to be deployed.
Lufthansa resumes passenger flights between Frankfurt and Nairobi on October 25 after an 18-year absence.
The carrier says it will deploy a Boeing 737-700 plane on the route instead of the bigger Airbus A340-300 as earlier planned.
The Boeing aircraft, which Lufthansa has contracted
from Swiss-based airline PrivatAir, carries approximately 135
passengers, less than half of the Airbus’ cabin capacity of between 275
and 300 passengers.
Lufthansa had planned to fly to Nairobi four times a
week (and raise this to five times in December) but has now reduced its
frequency to three weekly flights until it resumes using the Airbus
A340-300 beginning April.
“Original plans called for the use of an A340-300,
but due to last-minute operational developments concerning available
cockpit crews, Private Air was able to provide a short-term solution,”
said Lufthansa in a statement to Kenyan travel agents.
German pilots’ union Vereinigung Cockpit and
Lufthansa’s management have been locked in a long-running battle that
has resulted in 13 strikes over 18 months.
The dispute began over Lufthansa’s plans to scrap a
scheme that allows pilots to retire at 55 and keep 60 per cent of their
pay before regular state pension payments start at the age of 65.
The Boeing 737-700 has two cabin classes – economy
and business – while the larger Airbus A340-300 plane has business,
premium economy and economy classes.
Lufthansa had initially said it would be making the
eight-and-a-half hour flight to Jomo Kenyatta International Airport on
Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays, with the addition of a
Friday flight between December 11 and January 30, 2016.
The German multinational now says it will operate
three weekly flights (Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday) until April when
it will formally introduce the A340-300s as earlier envisioned.
However, due to “exceptionally high bookings”, the
airline will use the large plane exclusively for 12 flights between
December 15 and January 16 when many people are expected to escape the
winter cold in Europe to visit the warm Kenyan climate.
“We are excited to offer additional capacity with
the A340 due to high booking figures”, said Hakeem Jimo, Lufthansa’s
spokesperson for sub-Saharan Africa, in an email interview.
He declined to explain the reasons behind the
airline’s decision to implement last-minute airplane and flight
frequency changes or the specific issues the airline experienced when
contracting pilots.
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