Kenya Airways captains attend a meeting as they participate in a pilots strike organised by Kenya Airline Pilots Association (KALPA) at the Jomo Kenyatta International airport near Kenya's capital Nairobi, April 28, 2016. (REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya)
Kenya Airways pilots called off a strike on Thursday after the carrier met some of their demands, the Kenya Airline Pilots Association (KALPA) said, adding they would fully resume work on Friday.
KALPA's
members took the industrial action earlier on Thursday to push for the
removal of the airline's chief
executive, prompting Kenya Airways to
cancel all but two of its evening flights up to 2300 GMT.
Kenya
Airways, which is one of the largest carriers in Africa and ferries
10,000 passengers a day with a fleet of Boeing and Embraer jets, had
already cancelled 10 other flights.
KALPA General
Secretary Paul Gichinga said the airline had made some management
changes that met the pilots' minimum demands, without giving more
details.
"We are happy with the information they have given us on the management changes we demanded but that is not for us to announce," he told Reuters.
The
pilots had taken the action despite an agreement reached a day earlier
to defer the strike until June 1. The strike lasted from midday until
late on Thursday, but for practical reasons full flights will resume on
Friday.
Pilots oppose Chief Executive Mbuvi
Ngunze's planned measures to turn around the loss-making carrier, which
is 26.7 percent owned by Air France KLM, and have demanded his immediate
resignation.
The association said they would operate as normal while talks continue until June 1 over the rest of their demands.
Kenya Airways was not immediately available to comment.
Instead
of turning up for work on Thursday, scores of pilots attended a meeting
of the association. The pilots later voted to go ahead with the strike.
The
airline said the strike had gone on even though it had obtained a court
order the previous day barring any industrial action and the pilots'
union agreeing to delay the strike.
KALPA issued a
two-day notice to the carrier on Tuesday saying its members would stop
flying planes until Ngunze resigned over what it called "questionable"
turnaround measures.
The airline has been selling
assets, including planes, and plans to lay off 600 people as it tries to
stay in operation after three and a half years of financial losses.
Transport
Minister James Macharia and Dennis Awori, chairman of the airline's
board had met with KALPA on Thursday but their pleas not to ground the
airline's fleet were rejected.
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