Nairobi — The Kenya Aviation Workers Union (KAWU) has known as off its strike after a day of disruptions that crippled air transport companies and products.
Union Secretary Overall Moses Ndiema launched that operations at Jomo Kenyatta Worldwide Airport (JKIA), which became heavily impacted by the strike, will resume.
The choice came after a meeting with authorities officers, including Transport Cabinet Secretary Davis Chirchir, and other key stakeholders.
Ndiema told airport crew to reach lend a hand to their duties and known as on the authorities no longer to victimize any individual who participated in the commercial action.
“No worker should be harassed. They should be treated well and given ample time to return to work,” he said.
The most up-to-date industrial action, which left passengers stranded and disrupted flights at JKIA, Moi Worldwide Airport, Eldoret Worldwide Airport, and Kisumu Worldwide Airport, became precipitated by the authorities’s notion to rent JKIA.