Uganda Airlines on Monday successfully completed a maiden flight to Moi international airport at the Kenyan coast of Mombasa.
The flight UR 342 was fully boarded, the airline said. The flight took off at 11:30 am and landed in Mombasa slightly after 1:40 pm. The airline is running a promotional offer of between Shs 568,135 and Shs 770,000 for a return ticket. After the promotion, a return ticket will cost 1,044,067 for the economy and Shs 1,249,371 for business class.
Kenya Airways and RwandAir fly to Mombasa but both make a stop in Nairobi. The stop means passengers destined for Mombasa spend one extra hour on the way. With the stopover, the journey takes about 3 hours and 40 minutes but the direct flight takes two hours and 40 minutes.
Innocent Kihika, one of the passengers, said: “We arrived safely in Mombasa and now enjoying the Kenyan hospitality at the Moi international airport.”
Mombasa is particularly an important destination for business people in Uganda. Three-quarters of goods destined for Uganda dock at Mombasa. Many business people fly there whenever their goods dock or have a problem to sort. The coast is also an important tourist destination for Ugandans.
Uganda Airlines direct flight to Mombasa will make easier for those who find it tedious to fly to Jomo Kenyatta international airport (JKIA) in Nairobi before connecting to Moi international airport in Mombasa.
Meanwhile, another boom in the airline’s business has been the Entebbe-Juba route, according to an official at the ministry of Works. Initially, according to the official, government and the airline management were reluctant to add the Juba route on the fear that it might not make money.
“The route is making money,” the official said. “South Sudanese like to fly to Kampala and the Uganda Airline is making it happen.”
The recent peace talks also saw many officials use the airline to Juba and to Entebbe last week for the talks between rebel Riek Machar and President Salva Kiir. Also, Uganda is set to receive two Airbuses in 2020 which are expected to see the airline take competition from regional routes to international ones, according to Uganda Civil Aviation Authority director-general Dr David Kakuba.
This will complete the cycle for the revival of the airline, whose first commercial flight took place on August 28.
Source: The Observer