Tunisair Express
| |||||||
Founded | 1991 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hubs | Tunis-Carthage International Airport | ||||||
Fleet size | 4 | ||||||
Destinations | 12 | ||||||
Parent company | Tunisair | ||||||
Headquarters | Tunis, Tunisia | ||||||
Key people | Moncef Zouari, General Manager | ||||||
Website | tunisairexpress.com.tn |
Tunisair Express (French: Société des Lignes Intérieures et Internationales, Template:Lang-aeb) is an airline based in Tunis, Tunisia that was founded on August 1, 1991. Formerly known as Tuninter (Template:Lang-aeb) and SevenAir (Template:Lang-aeb), its parent company is the national carrier Tunisair. It operates to destinations within Tunisia as well as some services to Italy, France, and Malta.
History
From its founding in 1990 until 2000, Tunisair Express was known in French as Tuninter, and bore the Arabic name "Domestic Airline" (الخطوط الداخلية). Initially limited to domestic routes (it is still the only airline to fly internally within Tunisia), Tuninter, as it was then known, obtained permission to begin international operations in 2000. In honor of the date on which it opened its first international routes (7/7/2000), the airline was renamed "SevenAir" (Compagnie Aérienne Sevenair Tunisie, طيران السابع). SevenAir was owned by a relative of the wife of the former President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, and was renamed TunisAir Express following Ben Ali's departure from Tunisia on January 14, 2011.[1] Tunisair Express transported a total of six million passengers between 1992 and 2008, carrying 300,000 passengers in 2008 alone.
In December 2015, it has been announced that Tunisair Express will be merged into Tunisair in the foreseeable future to achieve a better profitability.[2]
Destinations
As of June 2015, Tunisair Express operates scheduled passenger flights to the following destinations:[3]
Hub |
City | Country | IATA | ICAO | Airport | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Djerba | Tunisia | DJE | DTTJ | Djerba–Zarzis International Airport | |
Gabès | Tunisia | GAE | DTTG | Gabès – Matmata International Airport | |
Gafsa | Tunisia | GAF | DTTF | Gafsa – Ksar International Airport | |
Malta | Malta | MLA | LMML | Malta International Airport | |
Monastir | Tunisia | MIR | DTMB | Monastir Habib Bourguiba International Airport | |
Naples | Italy | NAP | LIRN | Naples International Airport | |
Sfax | Tunisia | SFA | DTTX | Sfax–Thyna International Airport | |
Tabarka | Tunisia | TBJ | DTKA | Tabarka-Ain Draham International Airport | |
Toulon | France | TLN | LFTH | Toulon-Hyères Airport | |
Tozeur | Tunisia | TOE | DTTZ | Tozeur–Nefta International Airport | |
Tunis | Tunisia | TUN | DTAA | Tunis-Carthage International Airport |
Fleet
As of December 2015, the Tunisair Express fleet consists of the following aircraft:[4]
Aircraft | Total | Orders | Passengers | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
ATR 72-202 | 1 | — | 70 | |
ATR 72-500 | 2 | — | 70 | |
Bombardier CRJ-900 | 1 | — | 88 | |
Total | 4 | — |
Accidents and incidents
- 6 August 2005, Tuninter Flight 1153: a Tuninter ATR-72 crash-landed in the sea 18 miles off the Sicilian coast while on a flight from the Italian town of Bari to Djerba in Tunisia. The aircraft was carrying 39 passengers and crew, 16 of whom died. Officials at Bari airport reported that most of the passengers were Italian tourists. The fuel indicator was reading incorrectly because it was designed to be fitted only in a smaller plane: the ATR42. Therefore, the crew did not detect that the aircraft was running low on fuel. The turboprop suffered fuel exhaustion and the ATR72 ditched off the Sicilian coast. The airline was banned from flying into Italy for almost two years.[5]
References
- ^ Template:Fr « Sevenair devient officiellement Tunisair Express », Business News, 8 mars 2011
- ^ ch-aviation.com - Tunisair Express to be merged into Tunisair 14 December 2015
- ^ "Tunisair Express - Compagnie Aérienne Tunisie". Retrieved 7 June 2015.
- ^ ch-aviation.com - Tunisair Express retrieved 14 December 2015
- ^ John Hooper. "Tunisian pilot who prayed as his plane went down jailed in Italy". the Guardian. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
External links
Media related to Tunisair Express at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website Template:Fr icon
- Archives of the Tuninter website Template:Fr icon
- Aviation Safety Network summary