By GERALD ANDAE
In Summary
Kenya Airways faces a stiff challenge in the East African
airspace as Uganda moves to revive its national carrier just a few
months to the arrival of high-capacity planes ordered by RwandAir.
Uganda has announced plans to revive its airline in a move that could end KQ’s dominance.
President Yoweri Museveni has directed the Cabinet to conclude
discussions with investors to start a national airline as a matter of
urgency, reports the Daily Monitor.
“Ugandan travellers are suffering because of, apparently, not
having a national airline. I thought that our brothers in Ethiopia,
Kenya and South Africa would serve all of us. That, however, is
apparently not the case,” the Daily Monitor quotes Mr Museveni as having said.
That plan comes at a time when Lufthansa airline said early this
month that it would deploy a larger aircraft — Airbus A340-300 between
Frankfurt and Nairobi — four times a week beginning September this year,
up from the current three.
Lufthansa, one of Europe’s biggest airlines, resumed direct
passenger flights to Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport
(JKIA) from late October 2015 after an 18-year absence from the Kenyan
capital.
Last year, Rwanda’s national carrier, RwandAir, signed a
contract with European plane maker Airbus for the purchase of two A330
aircraft, becoming the only country in East Africa to operate such an
aircraft.
The two aircraft will feature a three-class cabin layouts. The
A330-200 will have 244 seats (20 business class, 21 premium and 203
economy class) and the A330-300 will have 274 seats (30 business class,
21 premium and 223 economy class).
Fastjet started operations in Kenya after the Kenya Civil
Aviation Authority (KCAA) gave it a green light for Nairobi-Dare-salaam
route.
An aviation expert, however, says that it will be challenging
for RwandAir to fill the larger aircraft since this requires a
partnership with other airlines.
“Things might not be that smooth unless RwandAir forms a network
with other airlines to enable them fill a larger aircraft,” said the
expert who did not wish to be identified.
Rwanda in December signed a pact with Uganda and South Sudan to
establish a legal framework for negotiations that would see local
airlines attaining fifth freedom rights along Juba-Nairobi, Nairobi-Juba
routes.
In aviation, fifth freedom rights mean an airline is allowed to
carry passengers from one country to another and from that place to a
third nation.
KQ has been capitalising on the absence of national carriers in
some of the Eastern and Southern African countries such as Uganda,
Burundi, Tanzania, Zambia and Malawi to grow its revenues.
The Kenyan national carrier, for instance, operates three local
destinations in Zambia, a move that has not gone well with the domestic
airlines in that country, which has previously accused KQ of dropping
and picking up passengers, denying them the numbers
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