The
world's most useless airport located in St Helena is a volcanic
tropical island in the South Atlantic Ocean has opened for commercial
operation.
St Helena receives first commercial Flights
St Helena international airport dubbed the “most useless airport”
in the world by the British media is to receive its first commercial
airline flight today.
The remote British island of St Helena is a volcanic tropical
island in the South Atlantic Ocean, 4,000 kilometres (2,500 mi) east of
Rio de Janeiro and 1,950 kilometres (1,210 mi) west of the Cunene River,
which marks the border between Namibia and Angola in southwestern
Africa.
A plane from South Africa is expected to touch down in the new
airport, ending the island’s reliance on a ship once every three weeks.
It is hoped the service, funded by the UK, will boost tourism and help make St Helena more self-sufficient.
Built with £285m ($380m) of funding from the UK Department for
International Development (Dfid), it should have opened last year but
dangerous wind conditions delayed the launch.
After further trials this summer the weekly service between Johannesburg and St Helena was passed as safe.
Up until now, the British territory has been one of the world’s
most inaccessible locations, only served by the ship from South Africa.
It is chiefly known as the island where French Emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte was exiled and died after his defeat in the Battle of Waterloo
in 1815.
An Embraer E190-100IGW aircraft operated by SA Airlink is due to land at 13:15 GMT on Saturday, carrying 78 passengers.
The flight is scheduled to take six hours and 15 minutes including a stop in the Namibian capital, Windhoek.