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SriLankan
Airlines making Colombo a hub for air travel
SriLankan
Airlines is fast turning Colombo into a hub for air travel, steadily
increasing the number of passengers in transit through the islands
international airport.
Three
years ago, only 28% of passengers carried by SriLankan through Colombos
Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) were in transit - a little
over a quarter. The bulk of travellers were tourists visiting Sri
Lanka and Sri Lankans returning from overseas.
Today,
the number of transit passengers has more than doubled, and the
total number of passengers carried by the airline has increased
by a third. Nearly half of its traffic (46%) is now transit passengers,
a number that is continuously increasing.
Peter
Hill, CEO of SriLankan, said: We at SriLankan take great pride
in offering rapid connectivity to travellers through Colombo, in
order to maximise convenience. We actively work towards minimising
waiting periods which we know is one of the most annoying aspects
of international air travel.
The
rise in transit passengers has been as steady as it has been impressive,
from 28% in 2003/04 to 36% the next year, 42% in 2005/06, to the
current 46%.
Transit
numbers remained steady at 46% during the six-month period between
April and September 2007, despite flight schedules being disrupted
for several months due to a temporary night-time closure of BIA.
With the airport now back to its 24-hour operation, the number is
expected to increase.
Manoj
Gunawardena, Head of Worldwide Passenger Sales, said: We offer
passengers a one-stop option for travel between regions as far apart
as Europe and the Far East. Our flight arrival and departure banks
are constantly being improved to reduce long transit times. However
BIA is perhaps the best airport in the region to spend time if a
passenger has to.
BIA
boasts of some of the most modern comforts and amenities among airports
anywhere, and has a reputation as the finest in South Asia. Although
it does not compare in size to the worlds major hubs, it has
a new terminal with modern aerobridges, sophisticated passenger
counters and baggage handling systems, and a well-stocked duty free
shopping complex. SriLankans Business Class Lounge there has
drawn praise from high-end travellers as being second to none.
With
SriLankan having positioned Colombo as the Gateway to India, a large
proportion of transit passengers are flying to and from the 11 cities
that the airline serves there. SriLankan last year became the first
foreign carrier to operate 100 weekly flights to India. It is a
firm favourite among South Indian labour traffic to the Middle East,
North Indians travelling to the Far East for leisure, and Indians
domiciled overseas who are visiting their country of origin. The
airlines route network now serves 54 cities in 28 countries.
But
an increasing number of travellers are using Colombo from other
regions. These include Middle Eastern travellers on vacation en
route to the Far East; Europeans travelling to the Maldives and
Thailand; and Japanese heading for the Maldives.
Many
of those in transit are customers of SriLankan Holidays, the leisure
arm of the airline, which provides excellent value-for-money packages
to many of the most popular tourist destinations in Asia.
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