Summary
- Allan Kilavuka held the post in an acting capacity since January after the loss-making airline’s former boss Sebastian Mikosz announced his resignation.
- Kenya Airways Chairman Michael Joseph said Thursday in a statement while announcing the appointment that Mr Kilavuka had during his short stint as acting CEO of Kenya Airways, “thrown all his energy into this role, whilst still maintaining his position as chief executive of Jambojet.”
Kenya Airways has confirmed the head of its low-cost subsidiary Allan Kilavuka as its new chief executive effective April 1.
Mr
Kilavuka, a Kenyan national, held the post in an acting capacity since
January after the loss-making airline’s former boss Sebastian Mikosz, a
Polish national, announced his resignation in the middle of a
renationalisation process.
Kenya Airways Chairman
Michael Joseph said Thursday in a statement while announcing the
appointment that Mr Kilavuka had during his short stint as acting CEO of
Kenya Airways, “thrown all his energy into this role, whilst still
maintaining his position as chief executive of Jambojet.”
“It
is particularly gratifying to me that the Board agreed to support the
appointment of Allan to the full role of substantive CEO,” Mr Joseph
said.
Mr Kilavuka will now join the boards of all KQ
subsidiary companies and will remain on the Board of Jambojet, initially
as CEO until March 31, 2020 and thereafter as a representative of Kenya
Airways, said the national airline.
He has led the five-year-old low-cost carrier Jambojet since January 2019.
Before that, he was General Electric’s global operations leader for Sub-Saharan Africa.
He will be charged with turning around the loss-making airline.
Kenya Airways first-half pretax loss more than doubled from a year earlier to Sh8.56 billion.
It
sank into losses in 2014 after making costly aircraft purchases, which
coincided with a slump in tourist and business travel to Kenya blamed on
a spate of attacks by Somalia-based Islamist militants.
In
July, Parliament voted a motion to nationalise listed airline Kenya
Airways to save it from mounting debts that could set the stage for the
buyout of minority shareholders. Mr Kilavuka holds a Bachelor of
Commerce degree from the University of Nairobi and a Postgraduate
Certificate in Psychology from the University of Liverpool.
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