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Africa
Air Freight
International

Turkish Airlines relaunches King Shaka International flights

20 Jun 2022 - by Staff reporter
King Shaka International Airport 
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Turkish Airlines has relaunched and extended its flights to King Shaka International Airport, further boosting Durban’s passenger and cargo airlift capacity. 

The airline extended two of its Istanbul-Johannesburg flights to include Durban on Thursdays and Saturdays and has plans to increase these to four weekly flights later this year, depending on passenger uptake. The first flight arrived in Durban on Thursday, 16 June.

Currently, Emirates operates five flights a week from Durban directly to Dubai, Qatar Airways flies four direct flights a week, with plans to increase this to five later this month, and now Turkish Airlines brings additional capacity with the reintroduction of its flights to Durban.

KwaZulu Natal’s Economic Development, Tourism and Environmental Affairs MEC, Ravi Pillay, said the reintroduction of the flights reopened business and tourism opportunities between Istanbul and Durban.

“It underpins the resilience of KwaZulu Natal, its people and leadership, to recover from the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and the implications the recent destructive flooding have had on the tourism industry,” said Pillay.

“This achievement, along with the recent direct Airlink flight to Harare, Zimbabwe, is indicative of the untapped capacity within our destination for air services, as well as the behind-the-scenes work being undertaken by Government and its agencies to bring air connectivity into KwaZulu Natal.”

King Shaka International Airport is regarded as the second-fastest-recovering international airport in the country, achieving 71.9% of its pre-Covid-19 passenger throughput in the year to date. By March 2022, international load factors had reached 50% of the March 2020 pre-Covid level and domestic load factors have achieved the pre-Covid level of 77% year to date.  

Dube TradePort Special Economic Zone CEO and Durban Direct Co-Chairperson, Hamish Erskine, said Turkish Airlines’ Johannesburg-Durban-Istanbul return route would boost cargo airlift capacity.

“With the gradual reintroduction of international, regional and domestic air services, the Dube Cargo Terminal has seen a growth of 23 percent in cargo volumes over the past 12 months. This is a direct result of the increased capacity available in passenger flights serving King Shaka International Airport.”

Most foreign countries have eased restrictions on South African travellers provided they are fully vaccinated. While South Africa’s vaccination rate is lower than other countries’, a larger proportion of the adult population – the age group that travels – has been inoculated. 

Locally, a resilient domestic market has been critical to the recovery of air travel in South Africa, with King Shaka International Airport passenger numbers breaching the 72%-mark year to date. Overall, domestic travel now contributes more than 74% of Airport Company South Africa’s airport network traffic. 

Durban Mayor, Mxolisi Kaunda said: “Collaboration with our tourism trade partners and other Government entities has enabled us to achieve great milestones under the most difficult time of Covid-19. The road to recovery is promising.

“Turkish Airlines has stated that Durban remains a strategic market for the airline and country. Prior to Covid-19, Istanbul ranked number seven as a top international destination for Durban, with as much as 88% of outbound domestic passengers originating in Durban. These flights to Durban will make it easier for local passengers to visit Istanbul and will allow travellers from our source markets in Europe to fly into Durban,” he said.

Acsa regional GM, Nkosinathi Myataza, said: “Turkish Airlines flights will add much-needed traffic between Europe and South Africa. This will help in propelling the recovery of both air freight and passenger travel, a key driver of South Africa’s tourism sector, an economic multiplier for the country.

“The resumption of Turkish Airlines signifies resilience and demonstrates efforts of recovery and thus rebuilding confidence within the aviation industry.”

Turkish Airlines has a route network connecting 128 countries and 329 cities from its hub in Istanbul. 

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