Summary
- The latest blockade came after Nairobi for the second time retained Tanzania on the red list of nations with high risk in coronavirus cases — a position that means travellers from the neighbouring country will continue facing a mandatory two-week quarantine to curb the spread of Covid-19.
- The decision has angered Tanzanian authorities who retaliated by blocking AirKenya Express, Fly540 and Safarilink Aviation from flying to destinations in the country.
- They join the national carrier, Kenya Airways, which has remained banned from flying into Dar es Salaam for close to one month now.
Tanzania has banned three more Kenyan airlines from its market
as a tit-for-tat trade war between the two countries escalated after
Nairobi Tuesday once again excluded Tanzanians among travellers exempted
from mandatory quarantine.
The latest blockade came
after Nairobi for the second time retained Tanzania on the red list of
nations with high risk in coronavirus cases — a position that means
travellers from the neighbouring country will continue facing a
mandatory two-week quarantine to curb the spread of Covid-19.
The
decision has angered Tanzanian authorities who retaliated by blocking
AirKenya Express, Fly540 and Safarilink Aviation from flying to
destinations in the country.
They join the national carrier, Kenya Airways
, which has remained banned from flying into Dar es Salaam for close to one month now.
“The
basis of the decision to nullify our approval for the three Kenyan
airlines is the ongoing dispute between the two countries,” Tanzania
Civil Aviation Authority (TCAA) director general Hamza Johari confirmed
in an interview with a Business Daily correspondent in Dar es Salaam.
Tanzania is a critical destination for Kenya Airways and the
airline had planned two daily flights to Dar and three weekly flights to
the resort city of Zanzibar from August 1 when Kenya resumed
international flights.
Tanzania Civil Aviation
Authority (TCAA) on July 30 cancelled plans to allow Kenya Airways to
resume flights, citing the decision by Nairobi to exclude Tanzania from
the list of countries whose nationals would be allowed entry under
revised coronavirus restrictions.
Tanzania has gone
silent on Kenya over resumption of Kenya Airways flights, more than 27
days after the government announced it has struck a deal with Dar.
Prior
to the ban KQ, which operates its regional hub from Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport in Nairobi, had a permit to fly 14 times to Dar
every week, three times to Kilimanjaro and two times to Zanzibar, mostly
ferrying tourists and business travellers.
Nairobi,
however, stood its ground, saying it would not compromise the health of
its citizens by putting commercial interests first.
“We
are not going to put commercial interests ahead of health matters.
Commercial interests are subordinate to health risks,” Transport
secretary James Macharia said last month.
Kenya Civil
Aviation Authority (KCAA) director-general Gilbert Kibe said talks were
ongoing to allow resumption of KQ flights to Zanzibar and Dar.
Prior
to the ban on Kenya Airways flights, Kenya and Tanzania had been
involved in retaliatory border blockades which affected thousands of
truckers and businesses.
Kenya’s latest Covid-19
red-list is likely to heighten the stand-off with its neighbour —
possibly leading to more trade wars between them.
“Some
countries are allowed to enter Kenya without the same condition despite
having a very high rate of Covid-19 infections,” Mr Johari said.
Tanzanian
authorities have taken a controversially relaxed approach to tackling
the coronavirus pandemic and began reopening the country two months ago.
President
John Magufuli’s refusal to impose lockdowns or physical distancing
measures and to halt the release of figures on infections since late
April, has made him a regional outlier and caused concern among
Tanzania’s neighbours and the World Health Organisation.
Kenya
and Tanzania have in the last four years had bruising fights over work
visa, taxes and market access rights for items such as sugar, milk and
dairy products.
This has affected bilateral trade
between the two nations, prompting a series of meetings, including a
summit in Arusha from November 12-16 last year to try and thaw the
frosty ties.
It was the second such summit following a
similar one in May 2019 in which Kenya raised concerns over multiple
non-tariff barriers placed on its goods entering Tanzania.
Although
the East African Community (EAC) Customs Union protocol requires that
partner States of the bloc treat goods manufactured from one another’s
country like local products, Tanzania and Kenya have repeatedly feuded
over market access.
For instance, Tanzania has
regularly claimed that Kenyan manufacturers have abused duty-free sugar
imports to make sweets and other confectioneries which they later dumped
into its market.
Tanzania, therefore, opted to retain
25 per cent import duty on Kenyan-made confectioneries such as
chocolate, ice cream, biscuits and sweets, citing use of imported
industrial sugar besides continuing to levy 25 per cent duty on Kenya’s
edible oils as well as the Tembo cement produced by Bamburi Cement
factory that it says are made from imported palm and clinker
respectively.
Nairobi retaliated by imposing new
tariffs on Tanzania products like flour after the neighbouring country
ignored a deal that granted Kenyan-made chocolate, ice cream, biscuits
and sweets unrestricted entry into its market.
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