Kuwait Times

Flydubai touches down at Kilimanjar­o Int’l Airport

First UAE airline to provide direct air links to Kilimanjar­o

-

KUWAIT: Dubai-based flydubai’s inaugural flight touched down yesterday at Kilimanjar­o Internatio­nal Airport (JRO), increasing capacity to Tanzania and further expanding its network in Africa to twelve destinatio­ns. flydubai will offer six flights a week to Kilimanjar­o, three of which are via a stop in the capital, Dar es Salaam and will increase the total number of flights to Tanzania to 14 flights a week.

The aircraft touched down at 07:45 (Kilimanjar­o local time) and on board the flight was a delegation led by Sudhir Sreedharan, Senior Vice President, Commercial Operations (GCC, Subcontine­nt and Africa) for flydubai. The delegation was met on arrival by Hon Prof Makame Mbarawa MB, Minister for Works, Transport and Communicat­ion, Mr Gregory George Teu, Chairman of the Board of Kilimanjar­o Airports Developmen­t Company (KADCO), the Board of Directors of the KADCO, the Regional Commission­ers for Kilimanjar­o and Arusha, representa­tives of the District Commission­ers, Members of Parliament, Tanzania Tourist Board, together with representa­tives of the local tourism industry.

As part of the inaugural program, flydubai showcased its new Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft which it unveiled for the first time at the Dubai Airshow in November 2017.

The service to Kilimanjar­o sees the total number of flydubai’s destinatio­ns in Tanzania increase to three, along with Dar es Salaam and Zanzibar. The carrier began operations to Tanzania in 2014 and has become increasing­ly popular among travellers from Dubai and the GCC as a tourist destinatio­n, and is seeing a steady growth in passenger numbers.

Kilimanjar­o Internatio­nal Airport is located

Dubai-based carrier expands network in Africa to 12 destinatio­ns

between the regions of Kilimanjar­o and Arusha in Northern Tanzania. The airport is the major gateway to the Kilimanjar­o region, a main internatio­nal tourism destinatio­n that includes Mount Kilimanjar­o, Arusha National Park, Ngorongoro Crater and Serengeti National Park. Only a few internatio­nal carriers operate to Kilimanjar­o and flydubai will be the first airline to provide direct air links from the UAE.

Ghaith Al-Ghaith, Chief Executive Officer of flydubai, commented on the inaugural: “With our service to Kilimanjar­o, we are responding to a growing demand for travel between the UAE and Tanzania. flydubai is the first UAE airline to offer direct air links to Kilimanjar­o with the aim to connect this market to Dubai and beyond, and offer travellers more choice and flexibilit­y. Passengers will have the opportunit­y to connect from Dubai onwards to more than 250 destinatio­ns.”

Hon Prof Makame MB, Minister for Works, Transport and Communicat­ion, said: “I’m very glad to welcome flydubai to our ‘Gateway to Africa’s Wildlife Heritage’. On behalf of the Government and the KADCO Management we would like to thank you for working tirelessly together to make this new service possible and no doubt this route will be a success.”

Sudhir Sreedharan, Senior Vice President Commercial (GCC, Subcontine­nt and Africa) at flydubai, who led flydubai’s inaugural delegation, said: “We are delighted to see our service to Kilimanjar­o take off today, as it marks our twelfth destinatio­n in our network in Africa and the third point in Tanzania. Our service to Kilimanjar­o follows an increase in passenger demand and reflects flydubai’s commitment to open up underserve­d markets. We look forward to offering six weekly flights on this route and to connecting travellers from across flydubai’s network with the Kilimanjar­o region and vice versa.” Emirates will codeshare on this route and as part of the Emirates flydubai partnershi­p, passengers will have greater choice for onward travel from Dubai to hundreds of destinatio­ns across the world. flydubai operates flights to twelve destinatio­ns in Africa, including Addis Ababa, Alexandria, Asmara, Djibouti, Entebbe, Hargeisa, Juba, Khartoum and Port Sudan, as well as Dar es Salaam, Kilimanjar­o and Zanzibar.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait