THISDAY

African Airlines Fear Flights Disruption­s over Ebola Outbreak in DRC

- Chinedu Eze AVIATION

The news of outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo a fortnight ago has elicited fears among African airlines that the developmen­t could hamper flights operations.

African airlines lost about $2.3billion to flight cancelatio­ns and black listing of some destinatio­ns in West and Central Africa following the outbreak of Ebola in 2014.

Although there is strong hope that the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) has taken pre-emptive actions in collaborat­ing with countries in the region to control the spread of the disease, but airlines are somewhat apprehensi­ve that there would be panic if the disease spreads beyond Congo.

In the wake of the outbreak of the disease in 2014, many airlines’ operations were drasticall­y affected because flights to their major destinatio­ns were cancelled.

Industry experts stated that the outbreak and spread of Ebola disease forced The Gambia national carrier, Gambia Bird, out of business while Asky, a Togo based airline, which operates largely in West and Central Africa was threatened with bankruptcy when it cut back most of its flights due to the spread of Ebola. The airline would have gone under but for the lifeline t received from Ecobank.

Also many internatio­nal carriers cut back their operations to most of West and Central Africa destinatio­ns, but the most adversely affected were African carriers like Ethiopia Airlines, Arik Air, Kenya Airways, Asky, Air Coted’Ivoire, South Africa Airways and others which did not only cancel most flights to some destinatio­ns in the sub-region but some of them were not allowed to operate to European and US airports.

THISDAY spoke to the head of flight operations of Air Peace, Captain Victor Egonu who urged the Nigerian government to ensure that anyone coming from any part of Africa is thoroughly

screened at the airports and the borders of the country to ensure that the disease did not come to Nigeria.

He expressed optimism that WHO and other concerned world organisati­ons would make concerted efforts to ensure that the disease did not spread, adding that Congo has been associated with the disease at least in the last 16 years and it recurs every four or five years.

“WHO and the United Nations should be able to rein the disease so that it will not spread. It has been happening in Congo for the past 16 years and it resurfaces every four or five years; so it is not really new.

But we should screen anybody coming from any African country strictly because even if the person is coming from Kenya; you don’t know where he went to before going to Kenya. It will give the world confidence to learn that Nigeria is strictly screening people at its borders and ports.

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