British Airways to Colombo: Opportunity – or our old habit of suspicion?

by

in

If British Airways resumes flights to Colombo, it will not be out of nostalgia. Global carriers do not reopen long- haul routes for sentiment. They return for one reason: commercial viability. Yield. Connectivity. Forward bookings. Corporate traffic. Diaspora demand.

Sri Lanka, despite its political and economic turbulence, is showing signs of regained momentum. Tourism has stabilised. Visitor numbers are improving. The UK–Sri Lanka corridor remains structurally strong. Heathrow remains one of the world’s most powerful aviation hubs. From a purely commercial lens, Colombo is again a logical play.

That is the rational starting point.
The immediate reaction in some quarters, however, has not been economic analysis — but suspicion. Allegations surface quickly: “inside information”, “board influence”, “operational intelligence”. The suggestion is that market re-entry is not the result of demand, but something more sinister.

This reflex tells us more about Sri Lanka than about aviation.

In every mature aviation market, airlines analyse one another. Schedules, aircraft types, seat configurations, pricing patterns, load factors — much of this is either publicly available or commercially observable.

Global carriers do not need conspiracy to evaluate opportunity. They need data, and data in aviation is abundant.

There is, of course, a line. Market analysis is legitimate. Access to confidential competitor information is not.

If anyone alleges that proprietary operational data has been misused, that allegation must be anchored in evidence.

It must be investigated through governance channels, documented procedures and audit trails. In functioning economies, that is how concerns are addressed — not through innuendo.

The larger issue is whether Sri Lanka’s institutional systems are robust enough to inspire confidence. Do state-owned enterprises operate with clear conflict-of- interest declarations? Are recusals documented? Are board governance structures transparent? If the systems are strong, suspicion loses oxygen. If they are weak, rumours thrive.

But let us not lose perspective. Competition is not sabotage. It is pressure. A global airline returning to Colombo would increase competition on the UK route. It would challenge pricing.

It would test product quality. It would demand reliability. Passengers benefit from that. A national carrier that is commercially disciplined should not fear it.

The difference lies in mandate. A foreign airline answers to shareholders. A national carrier answers to a broader national interest — connectivity, tourism strategy, economic diplomacy. That tension is real. But the answer is not paranoia. The answer is competence.

If Sri Lanka is serious about moving toward a USD 150 billion economy, it must behave like one. That means open competition, transparent governance, firm regulation and evidence-based scrutiny. Not reflex accusation.

If British Airways returns, it signals market confidence. The appropriate response is not suspicion, but strategic clarity.

Forward movement should trigger questions. But those questions must be anchored in equity and the rule of law.

Otherwise, every step forward will be greeted as a scandal. And no economy grows that way.


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