KQ’s Sh2.2 billion excess baggage fraud

kilam

JF-Expert Member
Aug 5, 2011
2,092
2,126
02 September 2019 - 05:00

If you travel frequently on Kenya Airways without baggage to check-in, chances are the chatty customer service agent with a killer smile who checks you in for your flight and wishes you safe flight” in a beautiful voice could be preying on you.

The details of this are contained in an audit report prepared by the audit firm Deloitte four years ago.

The audit report on Kenya Airways reveals that the agents have devised schemes to make quick cash from desperate or crooked passengers keen on carrying all their shopping to their destination cheaply.

They take bribes and in exchange allow passengers with excess baggage to travel with their load, in effect compromising not just the safety of the whole aircraft, but even the revenues of Kenya’s national carrier.

All these games are dangerous because the net effect is that it may be difficult to tell if the plane is overloaded just by looking at the data in the check-in desk.

Luggage data plus the passenger information is used to calculate “take-off optimization”, which is the maximum weight for a safe take-off.

The report which was submitted to the audit and risk committee of the Kenya Airways’ board of directors revealed that as a result of incorrect billing, and incorrect baggage allowance, and these under-the-table waivers of excess baggage charges, the airline had lost an estimated Sh2.2 billion within six months.

 
Back
Top Bottom