ID :
227827
Tue, 02/14/2012 - 11:25
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/227827
The shortlink copeid
M'sian Tourism Ministry To Persuade MAS, AirAsia X To Resume Suspended Flights
RAUB (Pahang, Malaysia), Feb 14 (Bernama) -- The Malaysian Tourism Ministry
will intensify its efforts to persuade Malaysia Airlines (MAS) and AirAsia X
(Malaysian-based low-cost airline) to resume their flights to regional and
international destinations which were suspended recently.
Its minister, Dr Ng Yen Yen, said this was important as the suspension of
the flights would cause the tourism industry to suffer a massive decline in the
number of tourist arrivals to Malaysia and hence, lose billions of ringgit in
revenue.
"This is because each foreign tourist will spend between RM1,000 and RM4,000
depending on their country of origin," she told Bernama after presenting the
1Malaysia People's Aid (BR1M) to over 400 recipients in Raub parliamentary
constituency (east coast Malaysia) here Tuesday.
However, Dr Ng said the ministry realised that the matter was beyond its
jurisdiction and hence, could only hope that the two companies would reconsider
their decisions.
"We cannot do anything as this is their business decision and they must have
their own plans and strategies, but we will work harder to encourage and
persuade both MAS and AirAsia X to resume the suspended flights," she said.
Dr Ng said to overcome the issue of declining number of tourist arrivals,
the ministry would focus more on the tourists who would stay longer and spend
more in Malaysia.
The ministry is expecting 25 million tourist arrivals for this year with a
targeted revenue of RM60 billion, she said.
Air Asia X had recently suspended four of its international flights, namely
to Mumbai, New Delhi, Paris and London, while MAS suspended its regional routes,
namely Kota Kinabalu-Osaka, Kota Kinabalu-Kuala Lumpur, Kota Kinabalu-Haneda
(Tokyo) and Kota Kinabalu-Seoul last month.
MAS had also reduced the frequency of its flights from Kuala Lumpur to
Surabaya, Johannesburg and Rome, Kuala Lumpur-Karachi-Dubai, Kuala
Lumpur-Dubai-Damman, Kuala Lumpur-Cape Town-Buenos Aires, and
Langkawi-Penang-Singapore.
-- BERNAMA