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Air Algérie became the first private French airline in ordering the type in 1958, [13] and received the first of them in early 1960. [14] Caravelles were operated until the mid-1970s. [128] An Air Algérie Boeing 747-100 in 1982 An Air Algérie Boeing 707 at Orly Airport in 1979 An Air Algérie Boeing 727-200 approaching Heathrow in 1994
Air France transferred some of its DC-3s and routes (which included Tunis–Bone–Algiers, Tunis–Ajaccio–Nice, Tunis–Bastia–Nice, Tunis–Rome and a cargo flight between Tunis and Marseilles) [6] to the new airline for it to start operations; [5] these commenced on 1 April 1949. [7] The first managing director of the company was Rene ...
Country City IATA ICAO Airport Ref Algeria: Algiers: ALG: DAAG: Houari Boumediene Airport [1]Algeria: Oran: ORN: DAOO: Oran Es Sénia Airport [1]Austria: Vienna: VIE: LOWW
Nouvelair Limited Company (French: Nouvelair Société Anonyme, Arabic: الطيران الجديد تونس), trading as Nouvelair Tunisie, or simply Nouvelair, is a Tunisian airline with its registered office in Tunis, [2] while its head office in the Dhkila Tourist Zone in Monastir, [3] [4] near the Hôtel Sahara Beach. [5]
The Tunis Airfield opened in 1938, serving around 5,800 passengers annually on the Paris-Tunis route. [7] During World War II, the airport was used by the United States Air Force Twelfth Air Force as a headquarters and command control base for the Italian Campaign of 1943. The following known units were assigned: [8]
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Air Algérie: Consumer services Airlines Algiers: 1947 Flag carrier airline S A Air Express Algeria: Industrials Delivery services Hassi Messaoud: 2002 Private, cargo delivery P A Algérie Ferries: Industrials Marine transportation Algiers: 1987 State-owned, marine transportation S A Algérie Poste: Consumer services Delivery services Algiers: 1913
Once the combat units moved east to other airfields in Algeria and Tunisia during the late spring of 1943, the airfield came under the control of Air Transport Command, under which it functioned as a stopover en route to Algiers airport or to Port Lyautey Airfield, in French Morocco on the North African Cairo–Dakar transport route for cargo ...