By JOHN NGIRACHU jngirachu@ke.nationmedia.com, Thursday, June 6 2013
The Kenya Airports Authority is in the process
of reviewing the rules on access to the lounges reserved for Very
Important Persons, National Assembly Majority Leader Aden Duale has told
MPs.
In a year, he said, a lounge for persons
considered important to airline business will be set up and a vehicle
provided for transporting VIPs to the planes.
Mr Duale made the statements in the National
Assembly Thursday afternoon in response to a question from Rarieda MP
Nicolas Gumbo.
He condemned the alleged mistreatment of former
Prime Minister Raila Odinga at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport
and apologised to him on behalf of Parliament.
He said Mr Odinga is entitled to use VIP II
Lounge, which is reserved for use by ministers, diplomats, MPs, Senators
and Governors among others.
"We respect our leaders, our former Prime Ministers, Vice Presidents and would not humiliate them in any way,” he said.
Mr Duale said last Monday, the former PM’s aides
had tried to have his motorcade access to the airside- the part of the
airport closest to the plane- and that had been prevented. (READ: Raila blocked from airport’s VIP lounge)
A similar attempt was made on Tuesday,
said Mr Duale, and both times the Kenya Airports Authority had given
Mr Odinga a security officer to ensure his passage through the airport
is smooth.
But he was put on his defence by MPs from the
former PM’s Orange Democratic Movement, who said he should be given
access to the VIP lounge reserved for retired presidents and vice
presidents.
“Some people in the Jubilee Government are excited
and they are behaving as if they are drunk,” Mr Gumbo said, prompting
the Speaker to ask him to moderate his statements.
MPs John Mbadi (Suba) and Dalmas Otieno (Rongo)
suggested the alleged humiliation of Mr Odinga is an extension of the
infighting that marked the life of the coalition government he partly
headed.
“Sometimes you may not like someone but there is a
good number of people who like him, who love him, who adore him,” said
Mr Mbadi.
He asked the President and the Deputy President to
“rein in the Secretary to the Cabinet Francis Kimemia and ask him to
respect the former Prime Minister".
Mr Mbadi said it would be wrong to equate the
former PM to MPs like him yet he was among those who fought for
democracy in Kenya.
Mr Otieno said given that the former Constitution
had to be changed to create the PM’s position for Mr Odinga, he should
be recognised as an important person in Kenya.
The Majority Leader maintained the former PM will only be allowed to use the VIP II Lounge.
The rules on access to the lounges are in place to
protect airports from terrorism and other crimes, he said, and Kenya
needs to adhere to international rules and practices.
Failure to adhere to the rules, he said, and JKIA would be downgraded and blacklisted internationally. Mr Duale said the Deputy President and Designated State Officers Bill
should be brought back and passed in the National Assembly so the
benefits due to the former PM and the former Vice President can be set
in the law.
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