Kenya will close its airspace for a 50-minute window ahead of US President Barack Obama’s arrival in the capital Nairobi on Friday, the country’s civil aviation authority (KCAA) says.
A ban on planes flying lower than 20,000 feet will remain in place in Nairobi for the duration of Mr Obama’s three-day visit, it says.
Some US media have criticised the KCAA for revealing Mr Obama’s travel plans.
BBC









![Adama Barrow arrived home, a week after taking the oath of office abroad amid a whirlwind political crisis [Jerome Delay/AP]](https://lusakavoice.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Adama-Barrow-arrived-home-a-week-after-taking-the-oath-of-office-abroad-amid-a-whirlwind-political-crisis-Jerome-DelayAP.jpg)




Brighton Kakumya
A country comes to a stand still when Obama visits