Kenya Airways expects to start receiving payments of outstanding fares from the Nigerian government within a month, CEO Mbuvi Ngunze said. The company is one of several international airlines owed $600m in foreign-denominated revenue held by the Nigerian government, Ngunze said. The carrier has been unable to collect $25m from its sales agents in Nigeria, Angola and Sudan because of dollar shortages in the oil-producing countries. “We should be able to start seeing a flow of cash” in July, Ngunze said Wednesday. “Some of the airlines are beginning to get some money.” Nigeria, which is grappling with the threat of recession, abandoned a 16-month currency peg on June 20 and sold $4 billion in the spot and forwards markets that day to clear a backlog of demand for hard currency. The Nigerian government is considering proposals by the IATA on how to reduce the balance of the money to be repatriated. Suggestions include payments in naira, Ngunze said. Kenya Airways will accept local currency settlement in the three countries. <br/>
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Competition over the Bangkok-Danang route has begun to heat up as Vietnam Airlines' inaugural flight from the largest city in central Vietnam touched down in the Thai capital on June 27. The Vietnamese flag carrier has became the second airline after Bangkok Airways to operate regular non-stop flights on the route, which has emerged as a new high-potential connection between the two countries. Vietnam Airlines' launch came one month after Bangkok Airways began operating four flights a week from Bangkok to Danang on May 25. Meanwhile, VietJet Air, the socialist republic's low-cost carrier, is also planning to offer regular service over the route later this year, according to industry insiders. <br/>