Kenya Airways passengers flying to Sierra Leone will have to pay $80 (Sh8,000) extra
for their return tickets after the government introduced a new tax to
pay for security equipment installed at the country’s main airport.
This
is after all airlines operating in the West African state were ordered
to collect a new security fee ($40 (Sh4,000 one way) from their
passengers at the point of ticket purchase effective April 1.
Sierra
Leone owes Securiport, an American security firm, Sh1.2 billion for
immigration control equipment installed at the Freetown Lungi
International Airport in 2014 to screen passengers amid aviation threats
like terrorism.
KQ operates daily flights to Sierra
Leone’s capital Freetown, mostly ferrying businesspeople looking to do
trade in the mineral rich country.
A return KQ ticket
from Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) to Freetown currently
costs between Sh153,000 and Sh182,000, according to the airline’s
website.
The International Air Transport Association
(IATA) has cautioned Sierra Leone government against implementing the
security tax, saying higher fares will result in a reduction of 7,500
passengers per year.
“The government has been paying
for this essential service since its inception but is now constrained to
continue due to the present financial situation,” Leonard Balogun, the
country’s transport minister, says in a circular seen by Business Daily.
West Africa represents significant number of KQ routes
in the continent, making the impending ticket price increase harmful to
its business.
Sierra Leone, which is grappling with the
aftershocks of the Ebola crisis and a collapse of iron ore prices, has
decided to pass on the immigration system’s installation and maintenance
costs to passengers.
Children under two years, airline
staff, as well as passengers whose transit time in is less than 24
hours and those diverted inland will be exempt from paying the tax.
The
minister addressed the letter, dated April 7, to several airline and
travel agents representatives, including Kenya Airways’ manager for the
West African region.
“This (tax) would impact the cost
of travel into Freetown. Through IATA, airlines have engaged the Sierra
Leone government with a view to have this taxation reversed,” said
Vincent Coste, KQ’s commercial director.
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