Jump to navigation

Kenya

Crisis talks due as airline clash escalates

The latest cargo flight trade row threatens to cause economic pain for everyone

Tanzania's foreign minister January Makamba and Kenyan counterpart Musalia Mudavadi are set to hold emergency talks to resolve the latest tit-for-tat trade row between Nairobi and Arusha.

The Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority (TCAA) announced on Monday (15 January) that it will suspend all Kenya Airways (KQ) passenger flights between Nairobi and Dar es Salaam from 22 January. The move was a response to Kenya's recent rejection of Tanzania's request to allow its airline, Air Tanzania Company Limited (ATCL), to operate cargo flights between Nairobi and third countries.

Within hours of the TCAA's response, Mudavadi and Makamba issued a joint statement vowing to resolve the conflict before the end of the week.

It is not the first time that the national airlines have been dragged into political disputes. In 2020, Tanzania suspended KQ flights after Kenya excluded Tanzania from its list of countries whose citizens could enter without quarantine restrictions during the Covid-19 pandemic (Dispatches 17/1/23, How a truce in the trade wars boosts business).

The latest dispute threatens to cause economic pain all round, particularly for business travellers and tourists by increasing prices. It also underscores the weakness of the East African Community (EAC) which, despite purporting to be a tariff and quota-free trade area, with a common external tariff, still has major disputes between its largest economies and protectionism (AC Vol 63 No 2, Club of rivals). Intra EAC trade has fallen in recent years.

Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda account for the bulk of the region's trade. However, increased supplies of goods from Uganda last year prompted Kenya to block imports of a range of staple products including milk and sugar. Uganda, meanwhile, has taken Kenya to the EAC court over the importation of petroleum products.



Related Articles

DISPATCHES

How a truce in the trade wars boosts business

Making gradual reform moves at home, President Samia Suluhu Hassan has moved faster to mend fences in the region and boost her country's GDP growth

Tanzania's President Samia Suluhu Hassan's regional diplomacy is gradually resolving longrunning tit-for-tat trade disputes in the region in the first few months of her tenure, the...

READ FOR FREE

Club of rivals

A successful club always attracts new members. That appears to be the rationale behind Congo-Kinshasa being fast-tracked to become the latest member of the East African Community i...


Cabinet crisis

The suspension on 8 April of negotiations over cabinet portfolios risks taking the country back to the turmoil of January and February. Just after Raila Odinga's Orange Democratic ...


Electrical storm

Some of the government's electricity supply deals – what Energy Minister Sospeter Muhongo called 'shoddy contracts that are a burden to Tanzanians' – are back in the ne...


Clay's feat

Whitehall's envoy breaks with eumphemism and talks straight on graft

British High Commissioner Edward Clay's poetic excursion into corruption busting has sparked an expected political storm. Less predictable has been the rapid unravelling of more co...