Dutch carrier’s handling of West African passengers triggers diplomatic unease and calls for boycott
By Gifty Boateng
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines has become the target of a fierce public backlash in Ghana after a weekend fiasco at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport left some 500 West African passengers predominantly Ghanaian, Nigerian and Togolese stranded for days without adequate accommodation, food, or access to basic hygiene facilities.
The episode, which saw ten Ghanaian passengers arrested by Dutch police for protesting their treatment, has reignited long-simmering grievances about the standards of service foreign carriers offer on African routes.
The lead complainant, Frieda Yayra Amable, a former U.S. employee en route from Vancouver to Accra via Amsterdam, documented the ordeal in a series of social media posts that quickly went viral.
She landed at Schiphol on the morning of 26 June, only to learn her onward flight had been cancelled and that the next available connection would not depart until 28 June and then only via Paris and Casablanca. That, she calculated, would stretch a journey from Canada to Ghana to five days.
But the delay was only part of the problem. KLM reportedly refused to arrange hotel accommodation or provide transit visas, leaving passengers to sleep on benches in the terminal.
Amable noted that the airport’s paid lounge, which offers showers and rest, closes at 10 p.m., rendering it useless for overnight stays. More critically, Dutch police denied requests for temporary visas to leave the airport, citing Schengen transit rules. “We are being held hostage,” she said. “I booked a hotel, but the police say I cannot leave.”
The most dramatic incident involved Richard Opoku, a 52-year-old Ghanaian who, along with nine others, was arrested and fined €170 for “disturbing public peace” after complaining about the delays.
Opoku, who had paid €1,400 for his ticket and planned only a ten-day visit to Ghana, told fellow passengers he was held in a police cell and later dumped in a hot bus before being returned to the terminal.
His detention paper, bearing number 3149346, was shown on camera. KLM management on site offered little more than a perfunctory apology. When a passenger with a respiratory condition requested access to his medication, which was in checked luggage, staff reportedly told him to consult the airport clinic despite the likelihood that his prescribed drugs would not be available in the Netherlands.
The incident is not isolated. Several passengers recounted previous episodes of poor handling, and even airport police reportedly conceded that KLM’s service standards have been deteriorating. One veteran traveller sighed, “Oh ho, not again.”
For Amable, the fault lies not only with KLM but with Ghanaian regulators who, she argues, have tolerated such mistreatment for years. She directly challenged the Ghana Civil Aviation Authority, the Ghana Airport Company, and the Ministry of Transport to intervene, demanding that they hold airlines accountable for service failures.
“If aviation authorities in Africa say they will not accept old aircraft or poor treatment, the carriers would have to change,” she said. “But corruption and self-interest allow them to dump decades-old planes on us.”
Her appeal for a boycott of KLM has resonated with many, but the practical impact remains uncertain. The Dutch carrier commands a significant share of the West African market, and Ghana’s aviation authorities have shown little appetite for confrontation unlike Nigeria, which in recent years imposed fines on British Airways and other carriers for similar infractions.
The saga ended with the passengers finally arriving in Accra on Sunday morning aboard Royal Air Maroc. Yet even then, the ordeal continued: Amable left the airport without her luggage, as only one officer was processing baggage complaints for an entire flight.
The queues, she noted, were “ridiculous.” She declined to wait, quipping, “I have been on the road since Thursday it is Sunday morning. They can take the bag.”
The episode exposes a broader pattern: West African travellers are routinely subjected to second-class treatment by European airlines, while their own governments look on.
The Ghanaian authorities’ failure to enforce minimum service standards or even to press for reciprocal rights agreements that allow stranded passengers to exit transit zones has become a recurrent embarrassment.
If the government does not act, the next crisis is only a delayed flight away. KLM has yet to issue a formal statement, but the damage to its reputation in the region is already substantial. For the 500 passengers, the price of travel was not just the ticket, but their dignity.
