Corporate News
By MUTHOKI MUMO, mumumo@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
Kenya Airways’
customers were among hundreds of passengers whose New Year travel plans
were messed up due to poor weather in Europe and the Middle East.
Heavy fog blanketed parts of the United Kingdom, France and
the Netherlands, frustrating traffic at key airports in those countries.
In the United Arab Emirates, government officials
issued warnings that fog had reduced visibility to less than 100 metres,
affecting the world’s busiest airport in Dubai.
“We have not cancelled any flights. Merely delayed
or diverted them due to bad weather. The disruption remains mostly in
Europe and UAE,” said Kenya Airways in a statement on Monday.
Checks by the Business Daily on the
website flightradar24.com indicated that a Kenya Airways flight to Paris
had been delayed by over five hours on December 31 while a flight to
London was yesterday delayed by over four hours.
Some passengers took to social media to vent their frustrations.
“@KenyaAirways still on ground. Are we going to
reach Dubai for New Year’s Eve party that we have paid (sic)” tweeted
@Mohamed1172k on December 31.
The phenomenon is affecting not just KQ but other
airlines. British Airways recorded delays while Heathrow Airport in
London reported that at least 119 flights had been cancelled by December
30.
KQ passengers on social media took issue with the
airline’s response to the crisis. Another passenger, Joyce Murigi,
narrated her frustration on Facebook after her flight to Paris was
diverted to Amsterdam.
She and fellow Kenyan passengers faced problems
booking onward tickets and navigating their way around Schiphol Airport
due to lack of European Union visas. They also had problems booking
overnight accommodation and accessing their luggage.
“.. but give your stranded passengers @Paris CDG at
least food vouchers, the ones without visas are mad. Over 30 hrs
huko,” tweeted @KENYANYUGI.
UK’s National Air Traffic Control Service said that
fog caused the airline delays since greater spacing is needed between
aircraft during conditions of poor visibility.
Twenty one per cent of KQ’s turnover came from its
European routes in the year to March 2016. KQ has seven flights per
week to Paris and Amsterdam. The two cities are key links in its network
as they are hubs for the carrier’s code-sharing partners, KLM and Air
France.
Kenyan holidaymakers had a tough time flying this
season. Thousands of domestic tourists were last week stranded after
JamboJet cancelled flights to Coast destinations due to technical
problems.
The Kenya Civil Aviation Authority (KCAA) has since
said that it is investigating the conditions surrounding the JamboJet
delays.
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