Kenya’s perennial traffic jams coupled with fatal road accidents
during festive seasons, have
generated a new breed of air and fast rail travellers heading upcountry and to the Coast.
generated a new breed of air and fast rail travellers heading upcountry and to the Coast.
While
road users report spending hours on end along major highways, travellers
by air and Madaraka Express report hustle-free movement whose departure
and arrival times are definite.
This Easter was not
different with Madaraka Express and low cost intra-county air carriers
reporting full bookings ahead of the festivities.
In an
interview, Kenya Railways Corporation Managing Director Atanas Maina
said Madaraka Express was fully booked for the period, adding that most
bookings were done by family parties.
“To avoid
inconvenience, passengers must learn to book in advance. It is the only
secret that has not been mastered by the majority of our customers,” he
said.
While Madaraka Express charged Sh700 for an
Economy class seat and Sh3,000 for luxury travel, budget air carriers
enjoyed a boom with many hiking fares to earn Easter dividends.
Currently,
there are four parallel trains departing the two cities (Nairobi and
Mombasa) respectively for the four-and-a half-hour journey, two in the
morning at 9am completing their journey at 1.30pm and the 2.30pm ones
that arrive at the destination at 7pm.
A survey of low
cost air carrier websites in search of available seats from
Nairobi-Eldoret, Nairobi-Kisumu and Nairobi-Kakamega as well as
Nairobi-Mombasa last week indicated they were fully booked.
An
Eldoret air traveller settled for a night bus that charged Sh1,350 for a
seat from Nairobi but was lucky to get a return flight air ticket at
Sh6,000 unlike other times when a one way ticket costs from Eldoret goes
for Sh4,200.
“Travelling by bus is a tedious
eight-hour journey while a plane takes a paltry 25 minutes from Nairobi
to Eldoret. That makes economic sense but my delays cost me an air
ticket and I have now to rely on a night bus to be home on time for
Easter Friday,” he said without giving his name.
Jambojet
chief executive Willem Hondius said demand for air travel has soared
this season with the remaining few seats costing a leg and an arm.
“Our flights are almost fully booked with the number of seats that are remaining going for higher prices,’ said Mr Hondius.
On
the Eldoret route, which is normally one of the cheapest that the
budget airline Jambojet operates, a one-way ticket was going for
Sh10,200 for both morning and afternoon flights Thursday.
Ordinarily, flights on this route cost Sh4,200 for a one-way trip.
A
flight to Moi International Airport in Mombasa was going for Sh14,200
Thursday morning while four afternoon flights have been fully booked.
Malindi,
which is a popular tourist destination has seen the price of a ticket
shoot to a high of Sh15,200 for the afternoon flight while the morning
one is fully booked for Thursday. The Diani route is fully booked for
the same day.
Fly540 charged Sh7,770 last Thursday with
afternoon flights already sold out. Five of the Mombasa-bound flights
belonging to the airline was fully booked on Thursday.
The
Kenya Association of Hotelkeepers and Caterers Coast branch executive
officer Sam Ikwaye said operators were banking on the long weekend for
increased business after last year’s December holidays were dampened by
the prolonged electioneering period.
The Kenya Tourism
Federation chairman Mohamed Hersi said most hotels at the Coast region
were enjoying 70 to 80 per cent bed capacity with camps booked at 60 per
cent.
“The Open Sky policy is a game changer as it has
connected Western Kenya to the Coast. The more connections we get from
one tourist circuit to another, the better for us,” Hersi said.
The
Kenya Association of Travel Agents chief executive Nicanor Sabula
welcomed increased air travel budget carriers saying they made it easier
for Kenyans to fly home avoiding the tedious and often boring road
travel.
Domestic travel is expected to increase this
year after 2017’s political season that saw many adopt a wait-and-see
attitude, opting to stay at home.
Last year, said
Tourism and Wildlife Najib Balala, Kenyans took up four million bed
nights compared to 2016’s bednights that stood at 3.5 million.
Kisumu,
Kakamega, Eldoret, Wajir, Isiolo, Mombasa, Ukunda, Malinda and Lodwar
enjoy daily and bi-weekly low cost air flights provided by Jambojet,
Skyward, Silverstone and Fly540.
Jambojet has also
upped its game by introducing double daily flights to Uganda’s Entebbe
International Airport at an introductory price of Sh11,330 for a one-way
ticket.
And according to travel data company, Forward
Keys, Nairobi’s domestic air travel recorded a 22 per cent growth last
year beating its closest competitors Tunis and Addis Ababa that grew by
14 per cent and nine per cent respectively.
Forward
Keys collated the data on reservations handled by more than 200,000
online and offline travel agencies worldwide between January 1 and July
31.
The analysis also looked at major airports in 10
cities across eight countries including Ethiopia, South Africa, Nigeria,
Egypt, and Morocco.
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