Govt Gifts Free Air Tickets to Kenyans Stranded in USA

An aeroplane mid-air
An aeroplane mid-air

The Kenyan Embassy in Washington DC has come to the aid Kenyan residents stuck in the country to help facilitate their travel back to the country.

A statement by the Deputy Chief of Mission, David Kahiro Gacheru, on the embassy's Twitter account on Tuesday, March 24, announced 20 tickets to Kenyans intending to travel back to the country.

These tickets, he stated, would be provided on a first-come-first-served basis and would only focus on citizens in urgent need of traveling.

He further announced that the embassy would facilitate the one-way travel of Kenyan citizens from the John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) to the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).

A screenshot of the post by the Kenya Embassy in Washington DC dated March 24, 2020.
A screenshot of the post by the Kenya Embassy in Washington DC dated March 24, 2020.
File

"All those successful to be at Terminal 4 JFK Airport by 9:00 a.m. (4.00 p.m. Kenyan time)," the statement concluded.

The decision by the embassy came just two days after the announcement by the government that no international passenger flight will land or take off from Kenya effective Wednesday, March 25.

Health Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe in his address to the nation stated that the flight ban would apply to passenger planes but exclude cargo flights whose crew must adhere to strict guidelines and will be limited to three people.

Kagwe also announced that Kenyan citizens and foreigners with permanent residence permits arriving before the deadline would undergo a mandatory self-quarantine.

Government Spokesman Cyrus Oguna further shed light on the decision by the government not to send planes to evacuate Kenyans stranded in other countries.

Speaking to Kenyans.co.ke he clarified that the directive was in place for Kenyans wishing to return from countries that have already closed their borders or are on lockdown.

"Any Kenyan wherever they are who is coming back must come back by Wednesday midnight. If they cannot come back within that period then they should remain wherever they are and obey those country's regulations," he stated.

"As of now, for Kenyans who are in Uganda and Uganda has these restrictions across the border, we will not evacuate them. It's only for a while anyway they can stay there," Oguna stated.

Government Spokesman Cyrus Oguna addresses the media at Kenyatta National Hospital on Saturday, March 14, 2020
Government Spokesman Cyrus Oguna addresses the media at Kenyatta National Hospital on Saturday, March 14, 2020
Simon Kiragu
Kenyans.co.ke
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