in

Pilots Union Lacks Confidence – Kenya Airways’ Leadership Says

kenya airways

The board and senior executives of Kenya Airways lack the ability to steer the carrier out of its current loss-making streak, the Kenya Airline Pilots Association (KALPA) said on Wednesday.

The airline, which is part-owned by Air France KLM, said last week its pretax loss narrowed 12 percent to 26.1 billion shillings ($257.78 million) in the year to March, amidst a decline in operating losses. Its net loss however widened.

The carrier has reduced its fleet, selling land and cutting jobs to recover from losses caused by a slump in tourism and the cost of renewing its planes.

“KALPA reaffirms its lack of confidence in the board of directors and top-level management overseeing the recovery of Kenya Airways,” the union said in a statement.

Kenya Airways declined to comment immediately.

The pilots grounded dozens of flights on April 28 when they went on strike demanding the removal of CEO Mbuvi Ngunze and other senior executives.

Kenya Airways’ head of human resources, flight operations director and head of safety left their positions after the strike, allowing KALPA to halt the walkout after a day.

KALPA wants the airline to stop its job cuts programme which targets 600 employees, saying it is unfair. It also wants it to end its commercial partnership with KLM, which it says favours the Dutch carrier at the cost of Kenya Airways.

Written by

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

President Mugabe Fights Back After Zimbabwe Protests

President Obama Boosts Clinton: Carry Her Like You Carried Me