New African, March 2018

Page 31

of African Ministers Responsible for Civil Aviation to review and find ways and means of implementing [something like] the Yamoussoukro Declaration. Remarkably, the signatory countries of the Yamoussoukro Decision agreed in 1999 to be “bound by the Decision to liberalise the access to the air transport market in Africa in its entirety and [to] fully implement the said Decision as party thereto”. The countries also promised to take “all the necessary administrative measures to give full effect to this Declaration ... except to the extent provided for a maximum transitional period not exceeding two years from the date of the declaration.”

38 years of talk, talk, talk

January’s news that only 23 of the continent’s 55 countries had put their names to the establishment of the Single African Air Transport Market (SAATM) was hugely disappointing, when the SAATM has been in the works for 38 years

As the AU puts it: “The lack of direct flights between African countries holds back economic integration and makes journeys much longer.”

In effect, if we go back to “ the general policy statement on civil aviation made by the Conference of Heads of State and Government…”, then Africa, this dear continent of ours, has had 38 years to discuss, plan, and drag itself to implement something like the SAATM. Thirty-eight years during which the continent has done what it does best – hold endless conferences and summits and talk and talk and talk, and yet be unwilling to implement an important project like the SAATM. You can see where my, and millions more Africans’, disappointment with the 32 refusnik countries come from. Our continent is the only place in the world today where direct flights between countries are at a criminal minimum. “Currently,” according to the AU, “only five countries have direct flights connecting to more than 20 other African countries – Ethiopia (30 flights), Kenya (28), South Africa (25), and Nigeria (20). As a result, air travel within Africa is so difficult and so frustrating that passengers are compelled to undergo bizarre routing and unnecessary layovers that shame the continent we call our motherland. Just hear this: Because of the lack of direct flights, in 2015, my wife and I, going on assignment in Blantyre (Malawi) from Harare (Zimbabwe) – a one-hour journey by plane – had to fly via Addis Ababa in Ethiopia (a journey of four-andhalf hours), and then spend one night in Addis before catching a connecting flight of three-and-half hours the next day to Malawi. That made it a 20-hour journey (made up of eight hours flying time and a 12-hour layover night in Addis). And the same journey could have been made in one bloody hour (excuse my French, dear reader) if there had been a direct flight. A similar thing happened to some Cameroonian journalists attending a conference in Accra (Ghana) last September. Because of the lack of direct flights, they had to be routed via Addis (a fourhour journey) to the far east of the continent where they spent a night before catching a layover flight the

next morning to Accra in the far west of the continent, another journey of nearly six hours. That made it a 22-hour journey for them. Yet if there had been a direct flight, it would have taken the poor souls under two hours to arrive in Accra from Yaoundé. Millions of Africans have had the same bad experience travelling within blessed Africa, and there is no end to the nightmare. If time is money as they say, you can imagine the zillions of dollars Africans lose every year doing the merry-go round between far-flung airports. It is a bondage Africans deserve to be freed from – and immediately! As the AU has cared to point out: “The lack of direct flights between African countries holds back economic integration and makes journeys much longer for passengers. By increasing connectivity, the AU’s SAATM initiative promises to end travellers’ misery and boost economic growth.” What’s more: “If air transport is fully liberalised in Africa,” says the AU, “passenger volumes can increase from the 2015 figure of 79.5m passengers to 303m by 2035 and to 602m by 2040.” The tax revenue that will accrue to our countries from such a huge jump in passenger traffic will be so beneficial to our economies. This is why the SAATM seeks a full liberalisation of intra-African air transport services in terms of market access, the removal of restrictions on ownership, and the provision of intra-regional connectivity between Africa’s capital cities. “The impact of air transport liberalisation accrues to the entire continent by improving air services connectivity and air efficiencies,” says the AU. “Bringing an end to the endless hours spent at airports waiting for connecting flights and the knowledge that a great continent is coming together should be the driving mission of African governments and the central story of SAATM.” But don’t tell that to the 32 refusnik countries of Africa – they might well decide to join the SAATM 400 years from now! Until then, there is little hope we will wake up from this nightmare. NA

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