easyJet currently has regular flights to some 100 cities in 27 European countries. Following Air Berlin, which began flights to Priština from Swiss and German cities in November, easyJet will be the second major European air carrier to enter the market. However, easyJet will first have to wait for approval before tickets can go on sale.
As a result of the increased number of airlines operating flights to Priština, the airport is one of the rare in the region posting strong passenger growth this year.
është shumë mirë per PRN!!! :)
ReplyDeleteWith Air Berlin, Belle Air, Germanwings, plans for easyJet and Tafa Air to open flights in PRN, seems like one attractive airport for low cost airlines. Actually, doesnt that make PRN the biggest airport in terms of low cost airline traffic in the former Yugoslavia?
why PRN? it's not that they have visa-free travel. why then? why don't they start flying to BEG? it's way larger market than PRN.
ReplyDelete@ Nikola
ReplyDeleteAlbania has a low cost airline (Belle Air) and they dont have white schengen...just yet. To add to that, another Albanian low cost airline is set to commence flights as of the 1st of december. Slovenia, who are in the EU and the schengen zone only have easyJet flights to London Stansted.
From which authorities is the airline asking a lisence from? Belgrade, Pristina or the UN?
ReplyDelete@Nikola: PRN might be interesting because there are a lot of EU/UN personnel and soldiers stationed there. Also, PRN allows these airlines to land for free and pay no handling fees.
ReplyDeleteYes, well done PRN, but what is the problem or where is the problem with another airports and LCC - why not Belgrade, Sarajevo, Banja Luka, Mostar, Nis???????? WHY??????
ReplyDeleteWhat is the recepy?
Thanks
The key is that there is no monopoly to protect
ReplyDeleteIs this the first non-EU (ex-TLV) destinations EZY flies to? Do you think Macedonians would travel to PRN to board a EZY flight to visit their relatives in Switzerland?
ReplyDelete@ Bosnian
ReplyDeletethey get the licences from the Sejdiu government
@ anonymous
low cost airlines have avoided Serbia, BiH and Macedonia because of landing fees in local airports and the fact that its residents had to pull out schengen visas, which was a process that put many many people off from traveling.
@ anonymous
that true, since JAT was forced to pull out from PRN and since Kosova Airlines gave back their aircraft to Hamburg International.
@ uny
Macedonians dont go into some areas of their own country where the majority is albanians let alone travel to Pristina. Going to Pristina is a 3 hour trip and additional costs.
@ uny
ReplyDeleteEZY flies to Croatia, Turkey, Israel, Egypt & Morocco, countries that are not EU members.
Dont forget the fact that are around 700.000 kosovars living around the europe
ReplyDeletePrishtina airport have 1 milion passengers per year, and have the best airport in the region
What you expecting serbs to visit a family every year come on they don't care for no-one
PRN is a much better market for low cost companies than BEG, even given the highest imaginable cost.
ReplyDeleteUnlike what your government's PR agencies have been telling you to make you feel better, one of the main criteria for developing the low cost market is the ethnic travel, i.e. diaspora. The 'white schengen' will only boost the traffic by an additional cca 15-20%, while the main traffic comes from abroad, from the pax who actually have money and are willing to travel on regular basis.
In addition, PRN clearly had insufficient capacity for that kind of travelling propensity.
I think this is where SKP's chances to act as a secondary airport for the Albanians slowly wither away. On the other hand, I'm quite certain Macedonians will not use PRN - only Albanians coming from Macedonia, living in its western part.
SOUR GRAPES from all the non albanians!! It makes me laugh with all the somments that i read. It is prishtina that easy jet chose and i am sure that the healthy increase in passanger numbers has to do with it oh and they all love albanian who wouldn't. PEACE
ReplyDelete