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Tunis Air

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Tunis Air

IATA Code
TU
ICAO Code
TAR
Corporate Address
Tunisair
BD du 7 Novembre 1987 2035 Tunis Carthage
Tunisia
Website
http://www.tunisair.com
Main hub
Tunis Carthage Airport
Country
Tunisia
Business model
Full Service Carrier
Association Membership
AACO
AFRAA
IATA
Codeshare Partners
EgyptAir
Middle East Airlines

Tunisair is the national carrier of Tunisia with its base at Tunis-Carthage International Airport. The carrier operates to over 40 destinations across northern and western Africa, the Middle East and Europe. Tunisair is majority-owned by the Tunisian government.

Location of Tunis Air main hub (Tunis Carthage Airport)


 
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75 total articles

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6,355 total articles

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Rebuilding Libya's aviation industry crucial to economic recovery

13-Jan-12 5:31 PM

Even before the NATO air strikes, the United Nations sanctions and the European Union ban, Libya’s aviation industry had little hope. The country, ruled by Muammar Gaddafi under an iron fist for the last 40 years, placed little focus on its airlines and airports, while countries in the nearby Middle East flourished and started to develop some of the largest hubs in the world. The Middle East/North African region has become increasingly important but it seems Libya was left behind, and when major unrest broke out in Feb-2011, the industry’s problems widened significantly. Now Libya has been “liberalised” and Gaddafi killed, it must begin the slow process of rebuilding an industry whose foundations were not strong to begin with. International airlines have resumed services, investment firms are showing interest in relaunching airport renovation projects, the country’s two national carriers have relaunched operations and are set to resume talks on their merger, and tourism operators are becoming optimistic about future bookings.

Inspired by the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions, the unrest in Libya is part of the greater Arab Spring, which has seen the leaders of Egypt, Tunisia and now Libya overthrown. Aviation in these countries during the unrest was unstable, however, Tunisair and EgyptAir have successfully restored operations to full capacity. In Feb-2011, Cairo International Airport recorded 530,000 passengers – a 54% drop from Feb-2010. The airport is now operating at near-2010 capacity, and in Jul-2011 and Sep-2011, passenger traffic surpassed 2009 levels. Libya’s Monastir Habib Bourguiba International Airport and Enfidha Zine El Abidine Ben Ali Airport, both operated by TAV Holdings, have been recording consistent traffic decreases of between 30% and 50% each month.

Asia's first time flyers the big winners as Paris Air Show PR juggernaut winds down

24-Jun-11 5:35 PM

The major beneficiaries of this week’s frenetic (public relations) activity just outside Paris live half a world away. They are Asia’s emerging travellers – the millions that have never stepped inside an aircraft, but for whom air travel is becoming attainable. That opportunity took a major step forward as Asian carriers – many of whom the world had never heard of a decade or even five years ago – stepped up in front of the world’s media to order narrowbodies for the mass markets they see blossoming at home.

Narita sees 60% pax decline since Japan earthquake; UK budget shakes shares

25-Mar-11 5:52 PM

The outlook after the Japanese earthquake was still not entirely clear this week even as Narita International Airport Corporation stated all operations at the airport had returned to normal, and Delta reported it was operating its “normal” 40 flights a day to Japan.

AACO , Teffaha Pi Global Alliances in the Middle East: not fertile territory

2-Aug-10 5:29 PM

The interests of airlines based in the Middle East are addressed by an organization known as AACO, Arab Air Carriers Association. Among regional carrier groups, AACO is unusual; only two of the group's airlines are affiliated with one of the three global Alliances; Star claims Egyptair and Royal Jordanian is in oneworld. Furthermore, the number of passengers attributable to those two carriers in 2009 is roughly 9.5 million, meaning that less than 10% of the region’s passengers travel on alliance affiliated carriers. And there appears to be only limited scope for this situation to change in the near future, as this overview reports.

AFRAA turmoil a reflection of Africa’s confusing aviation direction. Safety is the main victim

2-Jul-10 9:35 AM

When the African Airlines Association, AFRAA, elected Nick Fadugba as Secretary General just over six months ago, there was an expectation of action, of a new direction for a floundering aviation industry. There was certainly a great deal of rhetoric in the wake of his appointment. But then he summarily resigned two weeks ago, shortly to be replaced by AFRAA’s Director, Government, Corporate and Industry Affairs, Tewodros Tamrat, throwing the organisation into turmoil.

Africa Aviation Outlook: Cooperation, liberalisation and protectionism

11-Jun-10 3:48 PM

As African governments sought a path to successful locally-based airline operations, some attempted to gain the benefits of scale and coverage by forming joint airlines. With a good deal of support from European governments and flag carriers, two early examples of airlines jointly representing the interests of neighbouring countries shared resources, costs and – hopefully - the profits.

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