Union calls off strike that grounded flights at Kenya’s main airport
The Kenya Airports Authority said it was ‘engaging relevant parties to normalise operations’.
A union has called off a strike that grounded flights at Kenya’s main airport following talks with the government.
Airline workers were protesting against a build-and-operate agreement between the Kenyan government and India’s Adani Group that would see the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport modernised, and an additional runway and terminal constructed, in exchange for the group running the airport for 30 years.
The union wrote on X that a return to work agreement had been signed and the union’s secretary general, Moss Ndiema, told journalists and workers that the union would be involved in every discussion moving forward.
“We have not accepted Adani,” he said.
Transport Minister Davis Chirchir told journalists that the government would protect the interests of Kenyan citizens during the quest to upgrade and modernise the main airport.
Hundreds of workers demonstrated on Wednesday as planes remained grounded, with hundreds of passengers stranded.
Kenya Airport Workers Union, in announcing the strike, had said that the deal would lead to job losses and “inferior terms and conditions of service” for those who will remain.
Kenya Airways on Wednesday announced there would be flight delays and possible cancellations because of the strike at the airport, which serves Nairobi.
The strike affected local flights coming from the port city of Mombasa and the lake city of Kisumu.
At the main airport, police officers had taken up security check-in roles with long queues seen outside the departure terminals and worried passengers unable to confirm if their flights would depart as scheduled.
The Kenya Airports Authority said in a statement that it was “engaging relevant parties to normalise operations” and urged passengers to contact their respective airlines to confirm flight status.
The Central Organisation of Trade Unions’ secretary-general, Francis Atwoli, told journalists that the strike would have been averted had the government listened to the workers.
“This was a very simple matter where the assurance to workers in writing that our members will not lose jobs and their jobs will remain protected by the government, and as is required by law, and that assurance alone, we wouldn’t have been here,” he said.
Last week, airport workers had threatened to go on strike but the plans were called off pending discussions with the government.
The spotting of unknown people moving around with airport officials taking notes and photographs raised concerns that the Indian firm officials were readying for the deal, local media outlets reported last week.
The High Court on Monday temporarily halted the implementation of the deal until a case filed by the Law Society and the Kenya Human Rights Commission is heard.