Summary
- KQ, alongside AirKenya Express, Fly540 and Safarilink Aviation, remain locked out the Tanzanian market for a second month now in revenge for a decision by Nairobi to retain Tanzania on the red list of nations with high risk of coronavirus cases.
- Travellers from the countries listed as high-risk face a mandatory two-week quarantine in Kenya as part of measures meant to curb the spread of the virus.
- Attempts to resolve the stand-off have not yielded fruit, with Tanzanian authorities maintaining that the ban on Kenyan airlines would only be reviewed if Kenya dropped its nationals from the Covid-19 red list.
Kenyan airlines, including the national carrier Kenya Airways
,
face a lengthier ban from the Tanzanian market as the two nations
hardened their stance in a dispute over the management of the Covid-19
pandemic.
KQ, alongside AirKenya Express, Fly540 and
Safarilink Aviation, remain locked out the Tanzanian market for a second
month now in revenge for a decision by Nairobi to retain Tanzania on
the red list of nations with high risk of coronavirus cases.
Travellers
from the countries listed as high-risk face a mandatory two-week
quarantine in Kenya as part of measures meant to curb the spread of the
virus.
Attempts to resolve the stand-off have not
yielded fruit, with Tanzanian authorities maintaining that the ban on
Kenyan airlines would only be reviewed if Kenya dropped its nationals
from the Covid-19 red list.
But Kenya has stuck to its
guns, saying that allowing free movement of persons from Tanzania would
compromise the health and safety of its citizens.
"Tanzania wants Kenya to relax the Covid-19 restrictions before
they allow the resumption of flights. However, we are still engaged in
negotiation with the authorities there on the way forward and we are
hopeful a solution will be found soon," said Kenya Civil Aviation
Authority (KCAA) director-general Gilbert Kibe, who is leading the
Kenyan delegation the negotiations.
President John
Magufuli’s refusal to impose lockdowns or physical distancing measures
and decision 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 (WHO).
The
lengthy ban from the Tanzanian market deals a major blow to Kenyan
airlines, especially for KQ which is trying to re-coup losses from
several months of Covid-related restrictions on local and international
travel.
Rival Rwandair last week announced resumption
of three flights to Dar es Salaam and Kilimanjaro via Nairobi—hoping to
fill the gap caused by the ban on KQ and other Kenyan airlines.
Tanzania
is a critical destination for KQ, which had planned two daily flights
to Dar es Salaam and three weekly flights to the resort city of Zanzibar
from August 1 when Kenya resumed international flights.
The
plans, however, hit a wall after the Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority
(TCAA) on July 30 barred KQ flights, citing the decision by Nairobi to
exclude Tanzania from the list of countries whose nationals would be
allowed entry under revised coronavirus control measures.
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 es
Salaam every week, three times to Kilimanjaro and two times to
Zanzibar, mostly ferrying tourists and business travellers.
With
no end in sight for the tit-for-tat trade war between Kenya and
Tanzania, the Kenyan airlines are likely to continue losing business
opportunities—adding to the long list of firms that have fallen victim
of diplomatic feuds between the two countries in the past four years.
Kenya
and Tanzania have 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 between November 12 and 16 last
year to try to mend the frosty ties.
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