RwandAir, Air Uganda sign partnership deal

RwandAir has signed a new deal with Air Uganda to allow passengers booked on both airlines travel at their convenience.  The code share agreement unveiled in Kigali yesterday will enable the airlines to synchronise costs and equipment, while maximising profits, according to RwandAir officials. 

Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Mirenge (left) and Muleya exchange the agreement documents. The New Times/Timothy Kisambira

RwandAir has signed a new deal with Air Uganda to allow passengers booked on both airlines travel at their convenience. 

The code share agreement unveiled in Kigali yesterday will enable the airlines to synchronise costs and equipment, while maximising profits, according to RwandAir officials. 

John Mirenge, the RwandAir chief executive officer, said the arrangement will also extend   a range of aviation services to the travellers making the Kigali–Entebbe–Kigali route more competitive between the two airlines. 

Code share enables different partnering airlines to synchronise flights, tickets and equipment to ease passenger movement.

Under the new agreement the two airlines will agree on joint charges, making  it possible for them to sell tickets on either carrier, with passengers free to choose which flight to take at their convenience

"Our code share partnership with Air Uganda will ensure commercial success as we look forward to a record surge in arrivals. It will also enhance our growth,” Mirenge noted. 

Mirenge also stressed that the new deal will increase the airlines flight frequencies from 17 to 24 a week, thus boosting regional trade, especially the tourism and commerce sectors. 

Cornwell Muleya, the Air Uganda boss, said the deal is not only good for the airlines, but also for East African Community integration. 

"We need to integrate our aviation industry as a region as a trade bloc and this is one step towards that objective,” Muleya said. 

He added that the agreement would make it possible for the airlines to provide flight interconnections to other points in their respective flight networks. 

"This deal offers convenience to customers… With this partnership, customers have more flight options and flexibility for their travel and are not restricted to the flight schedule of one airline,” Muleya said.  

The two airlines will now jointly operate three flights daily.

This is RwandAir’s third major code sharing deal after those with Brussels Airlines and Ethiopian airways. 

The two airlines transport 337 passengers daily between Kigali–Entebbe-Kigali route, with RwandAir alone carrying 225 passengers.