COVID: Tanzania retaliates, bans Kenya Airways from its airspace
- Jomo Kenyatta airport
- The Observer-Uganda
- The Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority (TCAA) has
"on reciprocal basis” rescinded its
approval granted to Kenya Airways to
resume international flights to Tanzania.
The retaliation is a reaction to Kenya’s omission of Tanzania from
the list of 16 countries allowed to resume international flights into
Kenya effective August 1, 2020, since the airports' shutdown in March
when the coronavirus pandemic hit East Africa.
Kenya Transport cabinet secretary, James Macharia said flights from
Uganda, Rwanda, Namibia, Morocco, Ethiopia Canada, Japan, South Korea,
UAE, Qatar, Italy, UK France, Switzerland, USA (except California,
Florida and Texas) can resume flying to Kenya so long as passengers
arrive with PCR-based COVID-19 negative certificates and body
temperature not exceeding 37.5 degrees.
In a July 31 letter signed by the Tanzania Civil Aviation
Authority director general Hamza. S. Johari said Tanzania regrets to
nullify its approval for Kenya Airways flights between Nairobi and Dares
Salam, Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar effective August 1 until further
notice.
”This letter also rescinds all previous arrangements that permit KQ flights into the Republic of Tanzania,” Johari wrote.
The latest tit-for-tat is an escalation of the souring diplomatic
tensions between the countries over the handling of the coronavirus
pandemic.
Back in April, Kenya’s Citizen TV that described Magufuli as
“stubborn” for refusing to impose a total lockdown was ordered together
with its sister radio to carry a live apology every hour for seven days
if they did not want to have their licences revoked.
Tanzania has severally been criticised by its neighbours for its lax
approach to the coronavirus pandemic after President John Pombe Magufuli
declined World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendations to lockdown
the country to mitigate the spread of the virus.
Although Magufuli closed airports and schools, he refused to ban
public transport, places of worship, arguing that the economy didn’t
need to be disrupted. In fact, he encouraged Tanzanians to throng
churches and mosques to pray for coronavirus out of Tanzania.
Later, he accused Kenya of economic sabotage after Kenya blocked
Tanzanian cross-border truck drivers who tested positive for coronavirus
from entering Kenya. Tanzania said the drivers had been retested in
Tanzania and found to be negative. Tanzania retaliated by also blocking
Kenyan trucks from entering crossing its borders.
Magufuli later urged Tanzanian farmers to sell expensively their
produce to neighbouring countries that had locked up their countries due
to coronavirus so as 'to teach them a lesson.' Kenya, in particular, is
faced with an ongoing food crisis caused by drought and subsequent
flooding.
Last month, Tanzania reopened its airports, allowing in tourists but
it accused neighbouring countries of painting a false picture to the
world about the severity of the pandemic in Tanzania so as to discourage
tourists.
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