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View Full Version : Hong Kong Airlines to end Tokyo service


jetjockey696
4th Jan 2013, 18:01
Hong Kong Airlines announced on Friday it will end its services to Tokyo in January, after it suspended flights to Osaka last October, to “tighten” its focus on regional routes.

The company will axe its route to the Japanese capital from January 10 allowing it “to better allocate resources in servicing more popular routes and strengthen its regional competitiveness”, a company spokeswoman told reporters by e-mail.

“There is a need to continue to tighten focus on routes in line with the company’s regional strategy,” she said, adding the airline had carried 30 per cent more passengers this year than the previous year.

The airline described the move as a “purely a commercial decision”.

China and Japan have close economic ties but their political relationship has been particularly strained recently due to a dispute over islands in the East China Sea and Chinese resentment over past conflicts and atrocities.

Tensions over the Japanese-controlled Senkaku islands, which China claims under the name Diaoyu, escalated dramatically after the Japanese government bought three of them from private owners last September.

The number of Chinese tourists visiting Japan plunged 33 per cent in October this year compared to a year previously, to 71,000 visitors, according to the Japan National Tourism Organisation.

The Hong Kong-based airline was established in 2006 and operates 21 aircraft flying to international locations including Bangkok and Brussels, and to various locations in mainland China.

It ended flights to London, serviced by three Airbus 320-200 planes exclusively fitted with business-class seats, last September due to poor demand.

SCMP

Madp1lot
5th Jan 2013, 00:01
brussels? o_0

InSoMnIaC
5th Jan 2013, 00:25
I'm not surprised. Every time I've heard them departing from Narita they usually go straight to FL400

Freehills
5th Jan 2013, 06:28
Tokyo not popular? And Boston isn't a big college town

DUSKY DOG
7th Jan 2013, 00:34
So much for the "CHINESE CENTURY"