KAA Managing Director Jonny Andersen. FILE PHOTO | NMG
The proposed partnership between Kenya Airways (KQ) and the Jomo
Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) is the only way to save the
national carrier from being overrun by rival African and Gulf airlines,
chief executive Sebastian Mikosz told MPs on Wednesday.
The
KQ boss, who appeared before Parliament’s Transport, Housing and Public
Works Committee to defend the controversial plan, named Ethiopian
Airlines, RwandAir, Emirates, Qatar as well as Turkish Airlines as the
biggest threats to Kenya’s dream of becoming an African aviation hub.
All
the rival airlines, he said, are beneficiaries of merged operations
between their national carriers and their main airport operators.
“We
decided to copy what the competition is doing already. All these
(competing airlines) are organised in the manner that we are proposing
in this document.
All the airlines that are struggling
such as the South African Airways and Air Mauritius are working with a
model that we currently do,” said Mr Mikosz in his presentation.
Two
parliamentary committees are conducting hearings on the proposal to
merge operations of KQ and JKIA, in a transaction aimed at handing the
cash-strapped national carrier a financial lifeline.
The
Public Investments Committee (PIC), a separate House committee, last
week directed suspension of the proposed transaction, pending conclusion
of its ongoing investigation into the proposed deal that Kenya Airports
Authority managing director Johnny Andersen said the airports regulator
did not initiate.
Restructure aviation sector
Mr Mikosz appeared before the Transport Committee alongside Mr Andersen and Transport Principal Secretary Esther Koimett.
The
KAA and the KQ chief executives differed sharply on the proposed merger
of JKIA and KQ’s operations, but agreed on the need to restructure the
country’s aviation sector to reverse the trend where Kenya has been
losing aviation market share to its competitors in the region.
“KAA
has not accepted the KQ Privately Initiated Investment Proposal (PIIP)
proposal. We are doing due diligence and the evaluation we have done on
the proposal has shown us significant gaps that we need to address to
ensure we are on right side of history,” Mr Andersen said shortly after
Mr Mikosz pitched the proposal to the Transport Committee chaired by
Pokot South MP David Pkosing.
The Planning PS handed
the PIIP document to the MPs, but asked them to treat it as a
confidential document given the sensitivity of financial proposals
contained therein.
“Because of confidentiality on
financial data, we request the PIIP should be taken under
confidentiality arrangement of Parliament. This is sensitive information
we don’t want other airlines to get,” said Ms Koimett.
KAA
has in board minutes tabled before the PIC revealed fears that the
proposed merger of operations could bankrupt it, but Kenya Airways says
the plan could in fact attract foreign investments into Nairobi as an
aviation hub.
A strike called by KAA workers to oppose the merger was suspended after intervention by Transport Secretary James Macharia.
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