Albania opened a new airport yesterday: Kukës International Airport Zayed-North Wings. The country’s flag carrier, Air Albania, was the first to operate a flight there when a special service landed with Prime Minister Edi Rama on board.
A new airport for Albania
Albania opened a new airport yesterday: Kukës International Airport Zayed-North Wings. This is now only the second international airport in the country, located some 150 kilometers from Albania’s capital city, Tirana.
One of Kukës Airport’s purposes will be to serve as a low-cost airport, Top Channel reports. The plan is for it to be operationally ready by the end of June this year when it should also begin welcoming scheduled passenger services.
Commenting on the planned timescale during the opening ceremony, the Minister for Infrastructure of Albania, Belinda Balluku, said (translated):
“Today we will begin testing the runway and the procedures to make this airport more attractive. On 17th June it will be totally usable by all companies.”
Air Albania is the first to arrive
Air Albania, the flag carrier of the country, was the first airline to arrive in Kukës International Airport Zayed-North Wings when it officially opened yesterday. The airline sent its Airbus A319, ZA-BEL, for the occasion.
The aircraft arrived with Albania’s Prime Minister, Edi Rama, on board. The A319 flew in from London Stansted to Tirana, where Prime Minister Rama boarded it, and then it flew to Kukës. In this way, Rama met his election campaign promise that there would be a flight into Kukës from London before elections take place. The election will take place later this week.
London was no coincide: Air Albania will inaugurate a scheduled service to Kukës from London Stansted in June this year. This was also a repatriation flight from the UK to Albania after a four-month ban on arrivals. Local media have reported that there were several dozen passengers on board.
Albania’s aviation is booming
It is not surprising that Albania has opened another airport. It is even building one more too. The country is heavily reliant on air traffic for its links to the world. The country has a sizeable diaspora in Italy, Scandinavia, Turkey, Greece, Germany, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.
This explains why, even in these times of travel restrictions, Tirana Airport is doing very well. For example, it had more passengers in 2020 than Zagreb Airport in Croatia.
For example, today, 19th April, the following flights were and are scheduled to depart from Tirana:
- Pegasus Airlines to Istanbul
- Air Serbia to Belgrade, twice
- Lufthansa to Frankfurt
- Air Albania to Rome, Istanbul, and Verona
- Albawings to Bari
- Aegean Airlines to Athens
- Austrian Airlines to Vienna
- Alitalia to Rome
- Wizz Air to Milan Bergamo
- Jetairfly to Brussels
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