SAA eyes 5th Freedom for African Skies.
SAA Fleet in Airline Livery |
Given the success it has seen at its West African
hub in Accra, Ghana, South African Airways (SA, Johannesburg O.R. Tambo) is
seeking to expand its 5th Freedom business model to include more destinations
across Africa.
The Star Alliance carrier began operations out of
the Ghanaian capital to each of Abidjan and Washington Dulles in August 2015 by
virtue of the country's liberal policy of awarding foreign carriers 5th Freedom
traffic rights. Similar rights have since been secured from the Gabonese and
Cameroonian governments paving the way for the launch of a 3x weekly
Johannesburg O.R. Tambo-Libreville-Douala-Libreville-Johannesburg service.
As such, the carrier's acting General Manager
(Commercial), Aaron Munetsi, told African Aerospace earlier this year that as
part of SAA's renewed focus on developing its continental African market
access, it is now looking to expand the offering to countries closer to home.
Among the African cities where SAA is looking at starting longhaul services are
Harare Int'l (Zimbabwe), Lusaka (Zambia), and Entebbe/Kampala (Uganda).
“We are talking to other markets in Africa," he
said. "We are talking to Zimbabwe about Harare-London, to Zambia about
Lusaka-London and to Uganda about Entebbe-London. It’s been very well received.
The Ghanaian government has been exceptionally supportive and the government of
Uganda has approached us, asking what they need to do to fast-track the
process. The Zimbabwean government is cooperating with us very well and the
same with Zambia. We overfly most of these markets from Johannesburg O.R.
Tambo, so it makes sense for us to drop in capacity as we go.”
As former British colonies, Zimbabwe, Zambia, and
Uganda have sizeable expatriate communities resident in the United Kingdom
(UK). However, neither Lusaka nor Entebbe have enjoyed direct air services to
London since British Airways (BA, London Heathrow) curtailed its Southern
African services in the late 2000s. Since then, all connectivity to the UK has
been undertaken through other intermediate hubs including Addis Ababa;
Johannesburg O.R. Tambo, Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta, Dubai Int'l, Doha Hamad Int'l,
and Cairo Int'l.
Though Zambia and Uganda currently lack their own
national carriers, in Zimbabwe's context, Air Zimbabwe (UM, Harare Int'l) has
identified Harare-London Gatwick as a route with the potential to help
resurrect the ailing airline. However, owing to a combination of factors
including unpaid debts owed to international creditors as well as an onboard
product that struggles to compete with the likes of Emirates (EK, Dubai Int'l)
among others, Air Zimbabwe has held off resuming the service.
Source: https://www.ch-aviation.com/portal/news/55441-saa-eyes-more-african-incl-5th-freedom-routes
Comments