Summary
- A protocol guiding the resumption of international flights only has Canada, Switzerland, Japan, China and South Korea outside of Africa in the list of 11 countries whose citizens will initially be allowed into Kenya.
- Also on the list are Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, Uganda and, Rwanda, Morocco and Namibia.
- The list excludes countries like US, Tanzania, Britain and India, which brought in 743,310 tourists to Kenya or 37.1 percent of the two million travellers.
Kenya has excluded the US and the major European nations from a
list of countries whose nationals will be allowed in when international
flights resume from tomorrow.
A protocol guiding the
resumption of international flights only has Canada, Switzerland, Japan,
China and South Korea outside of Africa in the list of 11 countries
whose citizens will initially be allowed into Kenya.
This
means China is the only country among the top 10 nations that accounted
for most of the tourists to Kenya last time that is on the list.
Also on the list are Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, Uganda and, Rwanda, Morocco and Namibia.
The
list excludes countries like US, Tanzania, Britain and India, which
brought in 743,310 tourists to Kenya or 37.1 percent of the two million
travellers.
Transport Cabinet Secretary James Macharia said yesterday Kenya
had developed the initial list based on the intensity of coronavirus
cases in specific countries, suggesting that the list will be reviewed
in the coming weeks.
Conspicuously missing in the
initial list in the region is Tanzania, where authorities have not been
open with information regarding Covid-19.
"For a start,
these countries that I am mentioning are in the initial list. These
countries have mild or limited community transmission or they have
declining incidences. These are the ones we shall be allowing passengers
to come from," said Mr Macharia.
The US has registered
one of the highest caseloads in the world, with over four million
infections and 153,000 deaths reported by yesterday, according to John
Hopkins Hospital.
The United Kingdom had over 301,000 confirmed cases and about 45,000 deaths as of yesterday.
The
travel curbs look set to hurt Kenya’s tourism and Kenya Airways, which
had planned to ferry in passengers from the bulk of the countries not in
the government list.
Kenya Airways, which had lost
more than Sh10 billion in the six months to June due to the travel
restrictions, has unveiled a flight schedule to 30 destinations.
But
the national carrier will only be able to bring in passengers from four
of the 30 cities, including Kigali, Addis Ababa, Harare and Victoria
Falls.
It will be barred from flying travellers from
London, Amsterdam, Dubai, Paris, Mumbai and Johannesburg this August
when it resumes flights.
The US is a leading source
market for Kenya’s foreign tourists. It brought in 245,437 tourists last
year followed by Uganda (223, 010), Tanzania (193,740) and UK
(181,484).
Kenya’s Covid-19 cases jumped to 19,913 on Thursday after 788 new cases were reported from a sample of 5,521.
International
flights resume tomorrow after four months of being suspended to contain
the spread of Covid-19, which was first recorded in Kenya in March.
Mr
Macharia said passengers coming in on international flights will be
exempted from mandatory quarantine and the night movement restriction
owing to curfew.
He said, however, passengers whose
flight will arrive to Nairobi past the curfew hours, will have to show
proof by use of their boarding passes. President Uhuru Kenyatta extended
the curfew, which runs from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m., early this month.
"
Passengers arriving on flights after curfew hours will be allowed to
proceed to their hotels or residences as so long as they have valid
boarding passes and their drivers should have evidence that they are
coming from airport to pick or drop passengers," Mr Macharia said.
Passengers
will be required to have a negative Covid-19 certificate taken at least
96 hours before and would not exhibit coronavirus symptoms.
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