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Airlines Association of Southern Africa ... Airlines Association of Southern Africa ...

The Airlines Association of Southern Africa (AASA) notes with distress the UK government’s announcement that it will place South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Lesotho and Eswatini back onto its “Red List” of countries to which it imposes severe travel restrictions and quarantines.

“While we respect every nation’s sovereign right to implement whatever measures it sees fit to combat the spread of Covid variants, we urge Whitehall to reconsider what appears to have been a hasty decision, given the paucity of detailed knowledge and information on the newly identified variant, its presence and the efficacy of vaccines in limiting its potential to cause serious illness. With its announcement, the UK is delivering a body-blow to our region’s travel and tourism sector. It puts businesses as well as tens of thousands of jobs and many more livelihoods at risk,” said AASA CEO, Aaron Munetsi.

“The business and leisure air travel industry in Southern Africa has only just begun to see green shoots emerge as governments have increasingly begun to relax and look to align and simplify their travel requirements and procedures. However, the UK’s unilateral step is a major set-back that sets a worrying precedent,” he added.

Prior to the Covid pandemic, the commercial airline industry in South Africa supported close to 472,000 jobs across the economy and contributed $9.4 billion (approximately ZAR152.5 billion at today’s exchange rate) to the country’s economy. This equated to 3.2 percent of GDP. The industry is also of strategic social and economic importance in all of the other countries in the Southern Africa Development Community.

The Covid pandemic has caused disarray to air travel and tourism worldwide. Southern Africa’s connectivity with the rest of the world fell by 80 percent as a result of travel restrictions. Total domestic, regional and inter-continental demand has recovered to about 40 percent of pre-Covid traffic levels by the start of November 2021 with domestic and regional traffic leading the comeback. Prior to the UK’s “Red List” announcement today, long-haul traffic to and from Southern Africa was forecast to return to 2019 levels by 2025.

Source: Logistics Update Africa