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Questions abound KQ decisions as pilots face the sack

Questions abound KQ decisions as pilots face the sack

Kenya Airways chairman Michael Joseph./ Kenya Airways management is facing a decision-making crisis as a split in its board and top management plays out in the wake of the sacking of pilots and nationalization of the national carrier.

The board is split on the decision to send home 182 pilots and more than 400 cabin crew, the Star has established, a move that has been stopped by the High Court.

Justice Hellen Wasilwa has suspended plans by the airline to lay off some of its staff and send others on unpaid leave ahead of resumption of domestic flights this week, a move that could force the broke airline to dig deeper into its pockets to implement its recovery plan.

Plan to implement a 30 per cent pay cut for staffers who will be on duty when the national carrier resumes operations have also been stopped by court.

“We need to rethink decisions made at the airline. I agree there is a problem but the question is, how do we retain KQ as a national carrier,” a member who spoke to the Star on anonymity said.

Insiders have termed the decision to down-size as a four-man play by management and a section of the board, which has left out the rest of the board and management at crossroads.

This, even as KQ management remains at loggerhead with the Kenya Airline Pilots Association (KALPA), which has accused the top management of using Covid-19 as a “scapegoat”, despite losses at the airline dating more than four years ago.

KALPA General Secretary and CEO Captain Murithi Nyagah last week accused the airline’s management of ‘playing dirty’ in termination of contracts, where 22 pilots have already been sent home.

160 more are targeted in the process which Nyagah said Kenya Airways is acting in breach of an existing Memorandum of Agreement that was enforced by both parties on January 24, 2020, which also guides operations during the Covid-19 period.

Both the Kenya Aviation Workers Union (KAWU) and the Central Organisation of Trade Union(COTU) have hit at KQ of plans to downsize, even as regional competitors such as Uganda and Ethiopia Airlines are expanding.

Uganda Airlines has advertised positions of Captains for Airbus A330 neo,CRJ 900, First Officers and cargo management.Ethiopia Airlines is currently flying to more than 40 destinations, mainly cargo, despite Covid-19 affecting global travel.Air Rwanda on the other side has not laid off but sent home part of its staff on unpaid […]

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