By APOLINARI TAIRO
In Summary
Tanzania is seeking funds to purchase
four aircrafts in a bid to revive its ailing national carrier whose sole
leased airplane only flies 78 passengers.
Tanzania’s Transport Minister Prof Makame
Mbarawa reiterating President John Magufuli’s promise to revamp
the cash-strapped Air Tanzania Company Limited (ATCL) said the
government will buy two planes this year and two more by 2018.
The Tanzania Investment Bank (TIB) will
provide $20 million loan to the government as part of the money to
purchase two airplanes for domestic flights as it continues to seek
investors.
Last week, Russian aircraft maker Irkut
Corporation signed a memorandum of understanding with ATCL for a
possible supply of short and medium-range aircrafts.
Prof Mbarawa said the government had also
invited aviation companies from France, Brazil and Canada to chart out
modalities that would allow the smooth purchase of new aircrafts.
In March, Tanzania and Kuwait signed their
first air transport agreement that is expected to bolster economic ties
and enable civil aviation experts from the two countries to cooperate on
technical expertise.
“Our people will be able to learn from
Kuwait and vice-versa. When direct flights become operational we will
hopefully receive more tourists and investors from the Arabian Gulf
state,” the minister was quoted by the State-owned newspaper Daily News.
Yousef Al Fouzam, the director-general of
Kuwait’s Directorate of Civil Aviation, at the signing of the agreement,
said he would persuade Kuwait Airways and Jazeera Airways to launch
direct flights to Dar.
A restructured ATCL is likely to benefit
through code sharing and connections to domestic flights, once direct
flights are operational.
The troubled carrier lost all its regional and international
routes after grounding its aircraft which included Nairobi,
Johannesburg, Jeddah, Milan, Frankfurt, London and Mumbai.
Currently, ATCL operates a single Bombadier CRJ-100 Jet aircraft that accommodates 50 passengers for its domestic routes.
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