The US government has issued a fresh advisory, warning its
airlines of the risk of being attacked within Kenyan airspace in yet
another blow to local tourism.
The
US, backed by an express Nairobi-New York air link, is Kenya’s top
source of foreign tourists recording 245,437 arrivals last year.
The
US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), in an updated alert issued on
Wednesday, warned civilian airliners and all operators of US-registered
aircraft to “exercise caution” when flying over Kenyan airspace, citing
possible attacks by extremists.
“Those
persons are advised to exercise caution when flying into, out of,
within, or over the territory and airspace of Kenya East of 40 degrees
East longitude at altitudes below fl260 due to the possibility of
extremist/militant activity,” the agency said.
It
asked American operators to report any security related incidents they
may encounter within the airspace. FAA also asked the affected operators
to inform it of their travel plans at least 72 hours ahead of planned
flights to Kenya.
FAA said it will review the advisory by February 26, 2021. It issued a similar warning in February 2019.
The US considers Kenya as a strategic ally in
the region. The latest alert by its agency could rock recent growth in
the Kenyan travel and aviation sector after years of recovery.
“Aircraft
may encounter fire from small arms; indirect fire weapons, such as
mortars and rockets; and anti-aircraft capable weapons, including
man-portable air defense systems (manpads),” said the FAA on February 26
seen by Business Daily.
“Such
weapons could target aircraft at low altitudes, including during the
arrival and departure phases of flight, and/or target airports and
aircraft on the ground, especially at airfields located east of 40
degrees east longitude.”
Kenya has in recent years
suffered attacks by al-Shabaab, who are demanding the withdrawal of its
troops from Somalia. Al-Shabaab has been attacking the Somali government
and military targets, but occasionally launches high-profile assaults
in neighbouring States, including Kenya.
The US and Kenya recently struck a new deal for direct cargo flights between the two nations.
The
amendment deal, which adds all-cargo rights to the existing air
transport agreement, is expected to offer air carriers greater
flexibility to meet customers’ cargo and express delivery needs more
efficiently.
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