Monday, December 4News That Matters

Uganda Prepares to Welcome International Flights from Thursday

Uganda is set to reopen its air borders on Oct. 1 after lifting restrictions on international travel, the Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has announced. With airports shut for over six months due to COVID-19 restriction measures, flights into the country will resume on Thursday.

All tests must be carried out within 72 hours of arrival from an accredited laboratory. Ugandans returning to the country will be allowed to go home without quarantine measures if in possession of a negative test result. However, the Health Ministry will take addresses in the event of any necessary follow-ups.

When will flights resume?

International flights are scheduled to resume this Thursday, October 1. The UCAA has scheduled 13 flights on that day, with ten more flights the next day. Under current plans, the flight schedule is set to remain in place for three months.

However, there are no guarantees the situation will remain as it is. According to Vianney Luggya, the communications officer of the UCAA

“This is a tentative schedule for planning purposes. It is part of an ongoing internal discussion between the airport authority and air operators,”

Which airlines will operate flights?

A variety of carriers including Turkish Airlines, Emirates and Qatar Airways have been informed of the changes by letter. The letter, sent by the UCAA, advises airlines on new procedures and schedules that will remain in place for the next three months.

Each carrier is expected to resume flights into the country, dependant on travel restrictions in their country of origin. Other airlines set to resume flights again include the nation’s flag carrier Uganda Airlines, KLM, Air Tanzania, Kenya Airways and flydubai.

What now for Uganda?

There were ambitious plans afoot at Entebbe International Airport which were suddenly curtailed by the global pandemic. In an exclusive interview with Simple Flying, UCAA officer Vianney Luggya laid out plans for a new terminal by early 2022. Presently, it looks highly unlikely the project will be finished on time.

Since the global COVID-19 outbreak in March, Uganda has completely shut its international borders and grounded all flights. The economic impact on the nation has been severe, with the tourism sector in particular hit hard. With borders reopened, Uganda plans to gradually open up other important sectors including schools and places of worship.

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