Flights between Jakarta and Beijing resume
Flights between Jakarta and Beijing resume
Leony Aurora and Tony Hotland, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
China's flag carrier Air China resumed its Beijing-Jakarta
route on Jan. 9 after dropping it in April 1998 due to a
financial crisis in the company and the security problems in
Indonesia.
On Monday, Garuda Indonesia announced that it would also re-
open its Jakarta-Beijing route on Jan. 18. The airline stopped
serving the route in October 1997 due to the severe economic
crisis in the country.
Air China plans to fly twice a week from Jakarta and twice a
week from Beijing to Jakarta. The flights, using Boeing 737/700
planes with a capacity of 128 passengers, will transit in Xiamen,
China.
"Some 70 percent of Indonesians of Chinese descent living in
China reside in Xianmen, so it's the right city to transit in,"
said airline general manager Diao Hang on Monday.
He also said that he could not estimate passenger figures
because Indonesia would hold general elections this year.
"I can't give any projection but it will take sales of at
least 50 percent of the seats to keep the route running," Diao
said.
He added that the airline also planned to serve the Beijing-
Denpasar route since "Denpasar is a popular tourist destination
among the Chinese people".
Garuda Indonesia plans to provide direct flights three times a
week for the Jakarta-Beijing route, using its A-330 plane that
has a capacity of 293 passengers.
"The decision was taken after seeing a 10 percent increase in
the number of passengers going to China and back within the last
five years," said the airline's communication head, Pujobroto.
The growing level of trade between the two countries and the
citing of Indonesia as a tourist destination in March 2002 by the
Chinese government were also factors that could boost the number
of travelers between the countries, said Pujobroto.
He added that over 130,000 Indonesians went to China in the
last three years, and predicted that the figure would rise to
some 345,000 in 2004.
"We'll also increase the frequency of flights to Shanghai and
Guangzhou from three times to five times a week," added
Pujobroto.