Tunisair Express Explained

Airline:Tunisair Express
Fleet Size:5
Destinations:12
Iata:UG
Icao:TUX
Callsign:TUNEXPRESS
Parent:Tunisair
Founded:1991
Headquarters:Tunis, Tunisia
Key People:Montacer Bnouni, General Manager
Website:tunisairexpress.com.tn

Tunisair Express (fr|Société des Lignes Intérieures et Internationales, ar|الخطوط التونسية السريعة) is an airline based in Tunis, Tunisia that was founded on 1 August 1991. Formerly known as Tuninter (ar|الخطوط الدولية) and SevenAir (ar|طيران السابع), its parent company is the national carrier Tunisair. It operates to destinations within Tunisia as well as some services to Italy, France, and Malta.

History

From its founding in 1990 until 2000, Tunisair Express was known in French as Tuninter, and bore the Arabic name "Domestic Airline" (الخطوط الداخلية). Initially limited to domestic routes (it is still the only airline to fly internally within Tunisia), Tuninter, as it was then known, obtained permission to begin international operations in 2000. On 7 July 2007 (7/7/7), the airline was renamed "SevenAir" (Compagnie Aérienne Sevenair Tunisie, طيران السابع). SevenAir was owned by a relative of the wife of the then-President of Tunisia, Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, and was renamed TunisAir Express following Ben Ali's departure from Tunisia on 14 January 2011.[1] Tunisair Express transported a total of six million passengers between 1992 and 2008, carrying 300,000 passengers in 2008 alone.

In December 2015, it was announced that Tunisair Express would be merged into Tunisair in the foreseeable future to achieve a better profitability.[2]

In August 2024, the CEO of Tunisair, Khaled Chelli, along with the head of its internal union, Najmeddine Mzoughi were arrested as part of an investigation that began on corruption charges. [3] Montacer Bnouni was appointed as Director General of Tunisair Express on Juin 2024.[4]

Destinations

, Tunisair Express operates scheduled passenger flights to the following destinations:[5]

CityCountryAirportNotes
DjerbaTunisiaDjerba–Zarzis International Airport
SfaxTunisiaSfax–Thyna International Airport
TozeurTunisiaTozeur–Nefta International Airport
TabarkaTunisiaTabarka-Ain Draham International Airport
GafsaTunisiaGafsa – Ksar International Airport
GabèsTunisiaGabès – Matmata International Airport
El BormaTunisiaEl Borma Airportborder town
TunisTunisiaTunis-Carthage International Airport
MaltaMaltaMalta International Airport
MonastirTunisiaMonastir Habib Bourguiba International Airport
PalermoItalyPalermo International Airport
NaplesItalyNaples International Airport

Fleet

, the Tunisair Express fleet consists of the following aircraft:[6]

Accidents and incidents

External links

Notes and References

  1. « Sevenair devient officiellement Tunisair Express », Business News, 8 mars 2011
  2. http://ch-aviation.com/portal/news/42465-tunisair-express-to-be-merged-into-tunisair ch-aviation.com - Tunisair Express to be merged into Tunisair
  3. Web site: Okolo . Agatha . 2024-08-21 . Tunisair CEO & Union Head Face Corruption Enquiry . 2024-10-11 . Travel Radar – Aviation News . en-GB.
  4. Web site: 2024-06-05 . Montacer Bnouni, nouveau DG de Tunisair Express . 2024-11-02 . Managers . fr-FR.
  5. Web site: Our network. 5 June 2017.
  6. Web site: planespotters . Tunisair Express fleet .
  7. Web site: Tunisian pilot who prayed as his plane went down jailed in Italy. John Hooper. the Guardian. 25 March 2009. 7 June 2015.