Mindanao Times

Sports and medical tourism eyed to sustain Davao-Manado-Davao flights

- (Antonio L. Colina IV / MindaNews)

DAVAO CITY (MindaNews) -- Sports and medical tourism is the “low-hanging fruit” that can sustain the possible revival of the air connectivi­ty between Davao City and Manado in Indonesia, a business leader said.

Arturo Milan, cochair of the Regional Developmen­t Council, told “Wednesdays Media Forum at the Habi at Kape,” that tourism could potentiall­y address the issue of traffic sustainabi­lity, which remains to be the greatest challenge for the DavaoManad­o-Davao flight.

He said sports and medical tourism would encourage people to travel, and could attract a considerab­le number of travelers via direct connectivi­ty between these two cities.

“We’ve had three attempts already on how to make connectivi­ty between Davao and Manado sustainabl­e. It’s really about traffic developmen­t – how we can develop the traffic. There is a low-lying fruit that can jumpstart the developmen­t of traffic between these two cities. I would say tourism,” he said.

He said people behind sports in Davao aspire to revive the Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-MalaysiaPh­ilippines East ASEAN Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA), which can spur movement of people among the member countries.

Milan believes that Davao has a strong potential for medical tourism and can offer services to Indonesian­s in North Sulawesi.

“Those coming from North Sulawesi – their hospitals are not yet as advanced as what we have here in Davao. They need to travel to mainland Jakarta and that takes four hours to fly,” he said. The Davao-Manado flight takes only two hours.

Delegates from Davao embarked on a business mission to Manado last January 6 to explore the possible revival of DavaoManad­o-Davao flights.

Garuda

Group’s Citylink Indonesia revived

Davao-Manado-Davao air route with its twice-weekly flights on September 27, 2019. However, then Mayor Sara Duterte suspended four internatio­nal flights, including Garuda’s Davao-Manado-Davao, and 21 domestic flights from Davao Internatio­nal Airport effective March 2020 to contain the spread of coronaviru­s disease.

Under the “Air Transport Agreement” signed between the Philippine­s and Indonesia on March 24, 1972, the two countries agreed to enhance the mutually beneficial economic relations and people-topeople contact stemming from centuries-old ties of both nations.

A subsequent memorandum of understand­ing on the expansion of air linkages between and among Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s was also signed in 2007 where Davao and Manado had been identified as designated points.

Milan said that traffic can develop over time for as long there are regular flights flying between the two cities.

Meetings, incentives, conference­s, and exhibition­s can potentiall­y promote the city’s tourism that can encourage exchange of tourists between Davao and Manado, he said.

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