IATA welcomes Saudi steps to restore international air travel
RIYADH, August 25, 2021
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has welcomed the commitment of Saudi Arabia to further reopen borders and resume international air connectivity.
Saudi Arabia has taken measures to ease travel restrictions to the Kingdom and enhance passenger facilitation with the necessary health protocols to manage the Covid-19 pandemic, by:
- Opening up the Kingdom for tourists
- Removing quarantine for vaccinated travellers
- Expanding the facilitation of religious traffic to the holy cities
- Reinstating visa processing for international passengers
- Enhancing systems and health measures across all airports
IATA’s Regional Vice President for Africa and Middle East Kamil Al Awadhi said: “We welcome the recent steps taken by Saudi Arabia to restore air travel and enhance the passenger experience during a challenging time for aviation. Saudi Arabia recognises aviation as a catalyst for economic growth and modernisation, and we are pleased to see the Kingdom’s continued prioritisation of aviation as a key to achieving Vision 2030.
"After more than one year of border closures, the kick-off of the National Aviation Strategy will bring to life plans to triple the number of passengers to the Kingdom and fly to 250 destinations.”
In 2019, a total 977,000 jobs and SAR240 billion of GDP were supported by aviation in Saudi Arabia. The crisis has put 361,000 of those jobs and SAR85 billion at risk.
Restoring connectivity is key to speeding up the recovery of the Kingdom’s international market as passenger demand is not expected to return to 2019 levels before 2024, a IATA statement said.
Al Awadhi continued: “Prior to the pandemic, Saudi Arabia was one of the most connected countries regionally and internationally in the Middle East. The impact of the crisis has been significant, with a 96 per cent fall in connectivity compared to before the pandemic.
"The recent measures to open borders and ease travel restrictions are essential to restoring Saudi Arabia’s connectivity as well as realising the Kingdom’s Vision 2030.”
“We continue to call on governments, including the government of Saudi Arabia, to remove all travel barriers to help restore demand and revive the travel and tourism sectors that countries greatly depend on for their economies,” he concluded.-TradeArabia News Service