Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The airline will launch its services with six maiden routes from Jakarta to Batam, Medan, Padang, Palembang, Pekanbaru, and Pontianak. [ 9 ] Super Air Jet launched flights with three used Airbus A320-200s which formerly flew for India's Indigo and Tigerair Australia . [ 10 ]
Singapore Airlines alone operates more than 70 weekly flights between Jakarta and Singapore. The Jakarta Soekarno-Hatta–Surabaya route is ranked ninth busiest in the world by IATA in 2016. [208] Jakarta–Singapore, and Jakarta–Kuala Lumpur routes are ranked in the top ten of world's busiest international air routes in 2018. [209]
Batavia Air was the first airline with a delay more than four hours of Palangkaraya-Surabaya route due to operational problem on 2 January 2011. The airlines should pay a total of Rp42 million ($4,242) compensation to all passengers. [10]
Initial operations were from Surabaya on the island of Java to destinations not served by Garuda Indonesia's mainline fleet: Yogyakarta (also on Java); Balikpapan on the island of Borneo and Tarakan, North Kalimantan, just off Borneo's coast; and Makassar on the island of Sulawesi. By the end of 2001, Garuda had transferred five F28s to Citilink.
Juanda Airport is connected to Waru-Juanda Toll Road to Surabaya, which is about 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) from the airport. DAMRI buses are provided by the local government to deliver passengers to Surabaya. Fixed tariff taxis are available to various destinations in Surabaya and surrounding areas including Malang, Blitar, Jember, and Tulungagung.
Jakarta-Soekarno-Hatta: 79 Batik Air, Citilink, Garuda Indonesia: 2 Jakarta-Halim Perdanakusuma: 23 Batik Air, Citilink: 3 Banjarmasin: 21 Citilink, Lion Air: 4 Pangkalan Bun: 14 Batik Air, Nam Air: 5 Balikpapan: 12 Lion Air, Super Air Jet: 6 Denpasar/Bali: 10 Lion Air: 7 Makassar: 7 Lion Air: 8 Palangkaraya: 7 Lion Air: 9 Batam: 5 Super Air ...
On 6 December 2023, Pelita Air Flight 205, an Airbus A320-200 (registration PK-PWD), which was to fly from Surabaya to Jakarta, canceled its takeoff due to a bomb threat at Juanda International Airport, Surabaya. All passengers were asked to disembark, and one person was secured by officers.
Indonesia's capital city is Jakarta. Indonesia had 673 airports in 2013, ranging from grand international airports to modest unpaved airstrips on remote islands or inland interior areas located throughout the archipelago. [1] [2] Most of them are operated by Transportation Ministry technical operation units and state-owned PT Angkasa Pura I & II.