Brussels Airlines to increase flights to Africa
Brussels Airlines has outlined plans to increase flights to African destinations over the coming months, as it looks to rebuild its network in the Covid-19 era.
The carrier has long focused on its African network, and this winter 15 of its 16 planned long-haul routes will be to the continent, with the sole exception being flights to New York JFK, which are set to resume in February 2021.
Brussels Airlines will increase its current African schedules by 12 per cent from October 25, and during the peak period between the start of December and early January the carrier will offer 40 per cent more flights to the continent than currently.
Abdijan will move to a daily service, and there will be extra frequencies to Banjul, Bujumbura, Dakar, Douala, Entebbe, Freetown, Kigali, Kinshasa, Monrovia and Yaoundé. Flights to Luanda are also set to resume from February 2021.
Belgium’s flag carrier grounded its entire fleet for three months between March and June, and in August was granted EU Commission approval for a €460 million ‘Stablisation Package’.
Business Traveller