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‘Work together to make SAATM happen’

26 Jun 2019 - by Hilka Birns
Comments | 0

AFRICAN airlines and airports

need to work together to

address teething problems

that are delaying the full

implementation of the Single

African Air Transport Market

(SAATM).

This was the call from

African airline executives

at the AviaDev Africa 2019

conference. Air Namibia’s

chief commercial officer, Ben

Kakonda, called on fellow

airlines to share traffic rights

through codeshares and

interline agreements to make

SAATM work and open up intraAfrican markets. “We should

consider Africa our domestic

market,” agreed Nowel Ngala,

commercial director of Togobased ASKY Airline. “It took

ASKY three years to get traffic

rights to Dakar and it’s been

impossible to get fifth freedom

rights to Dakar and Burkina

Faso. We have a serious

problem with authorities who

are not willing to understand.”

Guarantees of fifth freedom

reciprocity and an effective

dispute resolution mechanism

were critical SAATM structural

back-ups highlighted by Kenya

Airways’ head of Network

Planning & Alliance, Martin

Gitonga. “African airports

should see us as partners

instead of taxing us at every

opportunity. East and South

African airports are taking a

lead in this, but the biggest

challenge lies in West Africa.”

Africa World Airlines head of

Commercial, Richard Kyereh,

said the private Ghanaian

airline had started positioning

itself to take advantage of

the opportunities that SAATM

would bring. “Most carriers

think SAATM will mean that

big airlines will swamp the

market and swallow smaller

airlines, but we think it will

bring competition and more

opportunities for small

airlines,” he said.

Ben said the airline was

already benefiting from fifth

freedom relaxations, such as

on its route between Ghana,

Namibia and Johannesburg.

“SAATM is going to open up

areas for small airlines like

ourselves, areas we never

thought of serving before.

There are some countries

where the solution is not

yet forthcoming. If all

countries sign up to SAATM

it will help us and it will

increase connectivity in

Africa,” he said.

Iata’s Raphael Kuuchi

advised airlines to engage

diplomatic channels to

negotiate fifth freedom rights

and to share their concerns

where restrictions remain. 

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