Aviation Transport

Air Peace introduces Abuja-Banjul Dakar connections.

****Plans Maiduguri, Jos operations

Nigeria’s leading airline, Air Peace, has announced the addition of Abuja-Banjul and Abuja-Dakar connections to its regional network of seven West African cities.

This is as the airline has also kicked off plans to launch flight operations into Maiduguri and Jos.

Air Peace Spokesperson, Stanley Olisa, who disclosed this in a news release issued to journalists on Thursday, stated that the introduced regional connections from Abuja operate on Mondays and Fridays.

He added that Air Peace is finalising plans to expand its presence in the North East and North Central cities of Maiduguri and Jos and launch dates will be announced soon. Air Peace already operates three routes in the regions- Gombe, Ilorin and Makurdi.

“These new connections and planned routes are a further testament to our determination to continually interconnect Nigeria, giving Nigerians more network options and seamless connectivity.

Also, Mumbai, Tel Aviv, Malabo and Congo Kinshasa are in the works”, Olisa asserted.

The airline said in January 2023 that it has 38 aircraft and is expecting eight brand new Embraer 195-E2s from its firm order in 2019 and additional 15 brand new Boeing 737 Max 8 and 10 order.

Air Peace leads Nigeria’s aviation industry with a network of 20 domestic routes, seven regional routes and three international destinations, with an increasing, mixed modern fleet comprising Boeing 777, Boeing 737, Embraer 195-E2, Airbus 320, ERJ 145 and Dornier 328 Jet.

Related posts

Delayed flight: AON condemns attack on airline’s staff by unruly passengers

Charles Okonji 

Huge protest targets car industry at Frankfurt motor show

By Abisola THOMPSON

NIMASA tasks Nigerians on vast businesses in maritime industry

Aliyu DANLADI

Airlines Demand COVID-19 Test Certificates from International Travellers

Our Reporter

FRSC begins clampdown on illegal motorcycle, tricycle operators in Plateau

By Shile GIWA

Naval chief tasks seafarers, ship owners on maritime security

By Abisola THOMPSON