The New Year 2018 has kicked off in high gear for RwandAir, the national carrier of Rwanda with launches of new routes.
The latest news is the now scheduled May 16 launch of its new Kigali-Harare-Cape Town route.
RwandAir is one of
the fastest growing airlines on the continent reaching out to more than
twenty cities in Western, Central, Eastern and Southern Africa, the
Middle East, Asia and Europe.
It has already been
operating the Kigali-Harare with four times a week; on Mondays,
Wednesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. The latest development, however,
enables the Harare-Cape Town extension to be added to the route.
The launch of this
route, which will complete RwandAir's coverage of Sub Saharan Africa
destinations, was made possible by an offer of air flight 5th Freedom
Rights by the government of Zimbabwe on Feb. 12.
The 5th Freedom
Right is the right to carry passengers from one's own country to a
second country and from that country to a third country and so on.
"Yes, we have
received 5th Freedom Rights to fly between Harare and Cape Town,"
RwandAir Communication Director, Yvonne Manzi Makolo, confirmed the
developed which was also heavily publicised in the Harare press.
Zimbabwe's Minister
of Transport and Infrastructure Development, Joram Gumbo, is quoted to
have said that the new RwandAir route will bring relief to travellers
from Harare to Cape Town.
The new route will
complete RwandAir's coverage of Sub Saharan Africa. In August last year,
the Rwanda's National Carrier launched its regional hub in Benin to
effectively serve Western and Central Africa.
In another
development, on Feb. 02, RwandAir revealed it is seeking to enter
Israel's aviation market and plans to recruit General Sales Agents to
represent it in that country. It launched a bidding process for
consultancy activities on Feb.02 to study and enter the Israeli market.
The bidding closes on March 03.
RwandAir is also
set to expand its wings to Abuja in Nigeria. The Abuja route will be
tagged to the existing Accra destination, where the flight will stop in
Abuja before heading to Accra in Ghana and is expected to be operated
four times a week.
"This is yet
another big milestone for RwandAir as we continue to expand our network.
Our aim is to provide our customers with seamless and better
connections on the continent and beyond," RwandAir's acting chief
executive, Col. Chance Ndagano, told a Times reporter.
According to
Ndagano, destinations to Abuja and Cape Town will help boost the
economies of the three countries in terms of tourism and trade on one
hand, and enhance bilateral partnership between Rwanda, Nigeria and
South Africa.
RwandAir also
already has 5th Freedom Right from the Nigerian authorities to fly
without any limitations along Abuja-Yaoundé route in West Africa.
Rwanda also
recently signed a bilateral air service agreement with Cape Verde,
opening more potential market opportunities for the national carrier and
the country's private sector.
Rwandair has plans
to spread to Conakry in Guinea, Bamako in Mali, Dakar in Senegal, Addis
Ababa in Ethiopia, Lilongwe in Malawi, and Durban in South Africa.
News reports have
also quoted Ndagano saying in an interview with African Aerospace, that
the carrier has immediate plans to enter the Asian and US markets
following the launch of flights to Brussels National and London Gatwick
in Europe last year. The next step is the launch of flights to Guangzhou
followed by New York JFK, in the United States, he said. "We are in the
process of applying for [China] permits and as soon as that process is
done, we will be able to serve that route. We are looking for one (A330)
to lease and be used on the China route," he said.
It acquired its
first A330 series (A330-200 and A330-300 Airbus aircraft) in 2016. It
also operates a narrowbody fleet of two B737-700s, four B737-800s, two
CRJ-900s, and two Dash 8-400s used on regional African operations
spanning West, Central, East, and Southern Africa.
Ndagano also
revealed that RwandAir is also considering longterm growth options,
including the acquisition of A330 and B737/737 MAX respectively from
Airbus and Boeing.
He said the number of planes to be ordered have been fixed as yet, and any order is still two to three years off.
"If the aircraft get filled up, maybe we need another," he said. "RwandAir is not seeking growth for growth's sake."
In a related
development, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) has agreed
to train officials of the Rwanda Civil Aviation Authority (RCAA).
The agreement
signed in Singapore this February indicates that Rwanda's officials will
be trained by officials from the Singapore Aviation Academy (SAA).
"Partnering with
the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore will impart aviation knowledge
and skills in our nascent human resource, which is a much needed
building block for Rwanda to steadily achieve the required standards for
a safe and secure aviation industry," said Silas Udahemuka, the
Director General of RCAA .
"In this regard,
the signing of the new training Agreement is an affirmation of CAAS'
commitment to the development of aviation human capital for the
advancement of international civil aviation," said Kevin Shum, Director
General of CAAS.
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