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Transport Cabinet Secretary James Macharia (pictured) has denied that there is a diplomatic row with Tanzania that is hurting movement between the two countries.
He was responding to reports by the East African country that it will not allow any Kenya Airways (KQ) flights between Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Kilimanjaro and Zanzibar effective August 1.
In a statement seen by Standard Digital, the Tanzania Civil Aviation Authority added: “This also rescinds our previous arrangements that permit KQ flights into the Republic of Tanzania.”
But speaking at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport on Saturday, CS Macharia said "we have not banned anyone."
He said Kenya only assessed the risk to allow travellers from certain countries with the Covid-19 certificate.
According to the CS, travellers with the certificate showing they had been tested within 96 hours do not need to be quarantined.
Tanzania was responding to an earlier announcement by CS Macharia on countries from which travellers will be exempted from quarantine when international flights resume. Tanzania was not on the list.
Tanzania resumed international flights and cross-border transportation on May 19, after President John Magufuli declared that the country was free of Covid-19.
"The corona disease has been eliminated thanks to God," Magufuli told worshippers in a church in Dodoma.
The East African Business Council called on Kenya and Tanzania to implement an East African Community approach over the matter.
Executive director Dr Peter Mathuki said the two countries should prioritise decisions that promote intra-EAC trade and revive sectors hurt by the ongoing pandemic.