Tanzania's President John Magufuli (left) officiates the opening of the
new terminal at Julius Nyerere International Airport, which is expected
to serve up to six million passengers per year. PHOTO | COURTESY
A new state-of-the-art terminal at Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere
International Airport was opened last week. It will handle international
flights and is part of the country’s bid to position itself as a
regional aviation hub.
President John Magufuli
officiated at the opening of the $282 million facility, which is
expected to serve up to six million passengers per year.
The president is quoted as saying that the construction of the terminal had been done using local funding.
He
urged the Ministry of Works, Transport and Communication and the
Tanzania National Roads Agency to ensure that the new terminal reflected
well maintained because it was the country’s image for foreign visitors
using the airport.
The airport’s Terminal I has an
annual capacity of 500,000 passengers while Terminal II has a 1.5
million-passenger capacity. At full capacity, the three terminals will
make Julius Nyerere International Airport (JNIA) one of the busiest hubs
in Africa.
According to Tanzania’s Transport Minister
Isaack Kamwelwe, the new terminal will also allow increased freight
volumes, signalling an increase in revenue collection.
JNIA is the largest of Tanzania’s three international airports.
The others are Kilimanjaro International Airport in the north and
Zanzibar International Airport.
A modernisation
programme for at least three more airports—Dodoma, Songwe and Chato—is
being implemented as part of a plan to revamp the country’s aviation
sector.
Last week’s inauguration of Terminal III at
JNIA came two weeks after the relaunch of long-haul flights to Mumbai,
India by the national carrier Air Tanzania.
The Mumbai
route heralded the airline’s foray into the Asian market. Other planned
routes are Bangkok, Thailand, and the Chinese city of Guangzhou.
Air Tanzania spokesperson Josephat Kagirwa told The EastAfrican they are planning flights to London and Lagos in Nigeria and Accra,Ghana.
The
airline currently operates 10 domestic routes, with regular flights to
Harare (Zimbabwe), Bujumbura (Burundi), Entebbe (Uganda), Moroni (Comoro
Islands) and Johannesburg (South Africa).
Its current
fleet comprises a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner jet, two Airbus A200-300s,
three Bombardier Q400s, one Fokker50, and one Fokker28.
Air
Tanzania has ramped up competition for other East African carriers like
Kenya Airways and RwandAir, with Uganda Airlines taking to the skies
later this month.
The struggling Kenya Airways is set to be nationalised by parliamentary order as part of a wider revival strategy.
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