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A
file photo of Wajir International Airport. Kenya has suspended direct flights
from Mogadishu to Nairobi and said planes will first land in Wajir for security
checks. NMGP PHOTO
By DAILY NATION
Kenya has suspended direct flights from Somalia's capital
Mogadishu to Nairobi for security reasons but Somalia has asked for
reconsideration, saying the decision was politically motivated.
The BBC reported on Friday that the flights had been
suspended and that planes will now land in Wajir for security checks.
Kenya's Interior ministry was not immediately available for
comment on the matter but Captain Gilbert Kibe, Director-General of the Kenya
Civil Aviation Authority, told the Nation that the decision was "purely
for security reasons".
On phone on Saturday, he said the suspension will last until
August 9 when a review will be carried out and a decision made on whether to
maintain or lift it.
'POLITICAL MOTIVATION
In a statement on Friday, however, Somalia's Ministry of
Transport and Civil Aviation asked Kenya to reconsider the decision, saying it
was bad for their strong relations.
Somalia said it was
"deeply concerned" by the move and regretted that Kenya was being
"unneighbourly"; it said the move was against "our tenets of
good neighbourliness and strong relations".
"The Federal
Government of Somalia believes this action places undue burden on Somali
citizens and other travellers," the statement said.
"This act also
creates [an] unnecessary barrier on trade and movement of people between the
two countries."
Somalia said it asked
Kenya to reconsider the decision in line with its mandate to "protect and
safeguard its sovereignty and the dignity and wellbeing of its citizens".
"The FGS will, in
the meantime, work with all relevant authorities to resolve this issue and take
appropriate action as deemed necessary," the statement said.
PAST POLICY
In 2006, Kenya imposed
a strict security policy requiring flights from Mogadishu to land in Wajir for
security checks before heading to any other part of the country.
The idea, Kenya
argued, would ensure the safety of passengers and cargo, as Al-Shabaab
militants had taken control of vast areas of the country.
In September 2016,
Kenya and Somalia signed an agreement to lift the ban, after both sides
certified security arrangements for departing flights at Aden Abdille
International Airport, formerly known as Mogadishu International Airport.
Kenya took about four
months to implement the agreement signed that year.
It turned out that
Kenya signed the deal to protect the miraa business - at the time, Somalia had
threatened to ban the sale of miraa from Kenya.
The then Meru Governor
Peter Munya, who is now Trade Cabinet Secretary, travelled to the breakaway
region of Somaliland and offered to influence its recognition if it assured
miraa sales.
BORDER ROW
Kenya and Somalia were
recently engaged in a row over their border - an Indian Ocean maritime
territorial dispute escalated with claims that Mogadishu auctioned oil and gas
blocks in a contested area.
As a result, the
Kenyan government asked Somali ambassador Mohamoud Ahmed Nur alias Tarzan to
return to his country for consultations and summoned its own envoy to Somalia,
Lt-Gen (Rtd) Lucas Tumbo.
In March, a search for
an out-of-court solution hit a snag, paving the way for a legal battle at the
International Court of Justice (ICJ).
Nairobi therefore put
together final touches on papers for the case which will begin in September in
The Hague.
In 2016, Kenya failed
to convince the ICJ that it was not within its jurisdiction to determine the
matter.
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