RwandAir has announced that it is to resume flights to the European cities of London and Brussels from its hub in Kigali, Rwanda. This service will begin on October 3rd as the African airline works towards rebuilding its passenger network. One notable switch from prior service is that the airline will operate service to London Heathrow rather than London Gatwick. RwandAir uses the Airbus A330-200 for its long-haul services. Photo: Airbus Service to begin in about two weeks
The inaugural RwandAir service from Kigali to Brussels and London Heathrow will depart on October 3rd at 01:00 local time. Both services will use the twin-aisle A330. The airline has only two A330s, one is the shorter -200, and the other a stretched -300. Our guess is that the -300 will operate the Heathrow service while the -200 will go to Brussels.
Flights to these European cities will initially resume on a twice-weekly basis, before increasing to three-times-weekly from October 25th. The flight distances are both roughly 4000 miles long. Photo: GCMap.com “Now travel bans and restrictions are being relaxed, we can once again resume flying to and from London and Brussels, and look forward to welcoming customers flying from Europe back to RwandAir.” -Yvonne Manzi Makolo, CEO of RwandAir Makolo adds that the airline has been operating cargo and repatriation flights from London Heathrow during the pandemic. Now the carrier will operate scheduled passenger flights for the first time into and out of one of Europe’s largest and busiest airports. Moving from London Heathrow to London Gatwick
Once Rwandair resumes its European services, the airline’s UK operations will switch from London Gatwick to London Heathrow for the first time. Simple Flying asked the airline their reasoning for the change. The airline responded, saying the following: “The move to London Heathrow allows RwandAir to take advantage of the wider network of connecting passengers from around the world, as well as giving passengers in the UK better access to RwandAir flights from London.” As part of the airline’s official press release, it had also noted that this move would “significantly benefit customers flying into Heathrow from other UK cities who then wish to fly on seamlessly to Rwanda and other parts of Africa.” Adding that it has ‘ never been easier’ to reach Kigali or other major African cities such as Nairobi, Entebbe, Lusaka, and Harare from London. Transferring between Heathrow and Gatwick […]