ASEAN to rationalize airline routes: Official
ASEAN to rationalize airline routes: Official
Southeast Asian countries are expected to rationalize airline
routes because of the drop in the number of people flying since
the terror attacks on the United States, an official said
Thursday in Kuala Lumpur.
The comments came from Malaysia's Transport Minister Ling
Liong Sik as he opened an Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) transport ministers meeting in Seri Kembangan near here.
"The cold and terrifying act of crashing passenger planes is
unprecedented and will have a most damaging role on the travel
and transport industry," he was quoted as saying by Bernama news
agency.
ASEAN governments expected closer cooperation among all member
countries to cope with the challenge facing the transport
industry, he said.
They should become more focused on strategies and priorities
and be committed to working together. "But I believe that out of
the crisis, we would emerge stronger," Ling said.
He said security checks had to be upgraded and new equipment
installed to safeguard airlines and restore confidence in flying
among passengers.
He said he expected the two-day meeting would also produce
"agreements on multimodal transport and on the facilitating of
inter-state transport," as well progress on three protocols to
improve cooperation.
The protocols would cover the designation of transit routes
and facilities, railway border and interchange routes and the
transport of dangerous goods.
ASEAN groups Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia,
Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.--AFP