Gulf aviation sector hit hard as long haul travel hubs feel bigger impact from lockdowns KUWAIT CITY: State-owned Kuwait Airways said it would lay off 1,500 expatriate employees due to “significant difficulties” caused by the coronavirus pandemic on Thursday. The loss-making national carrier, which has a total of 6,925 employees, has struggled amid the regional and worldwide downturn in air travel. “In dealing with the coronavirus crisis and its negative impact on commercial operations ... Kuwait Airways announces the termination of around 1,500 non-Kuwaiti employees (contracts)” the airline said on Twitter. It said the decision came as part of a “comprehensive plan” to deal with the pandemic’s economic impacts which meant the company is facing “significant difficulties.” Kuwait, like other oil-rich Gulf states, has been severely hit by a slump in oil revenues and the economic impacts of coronavirus. Kuwait Airways, which has a fleet of 30 aircraft, has been mostly grounded like almost all airlines in the Middle East due to lockdowns. It did, however, operate over 200 flights in late April and early May to repatriate some 30,000 Kuwaiti citizens from abroad. The carrier’s losses are paid by the government, which has not yet announced any special compensation. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) forecast last month that air traffic in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) was set to tumble by more than a half. The IATA said that the MENA region’s airlines’ revenues in 2020 would be slashed by $24.5 billion compared to last year, and warned that the area’s aviation shutdown threatened some 1.2 million jobs. Private companies in Kuwait have fired hundreds of employees in the past few weeks, but Kuwait Airways is the first government agency to take such action. The Kuwait Municipality has said it would soon sack at least half of its 900 expatriate employees. Around 3.4 million foreigners live and work in Kuwait, making up some 70 percent of the Gulf state’s population.
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