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Air Algérie SpA [4] (Arabic: الخطوط الجوية الجزائرية, al-Khuṭūṭu l-Jawwiyyatu l-Jazāā’iriyyah) is the flag carrier of Algeria, [5] with its head office in the El-Djazair office block in Algiers. [6] [7] With flights operating mostly from Houari Boumedienne Airport in Algiers & Ahmed Ben Bella Airport in Oran.
Airline Image IATA ICAO Callsign Commenced operations Notes Air Algérie: AH: DAH: AIR ALGERIE: 1962: Air Express Algeria: AEA: Air Express: 2002: Star Aviation [3 ...
On 21 November 2023, an Air Algerie Cargo Boeing 737-800 freighter aircraft, registration 7T-VJJ, performing flight 1208 to Paris Charles de Gaulle airport, auto-rotated and struck its tail onto runway 05's surface, causing holes to open on the aircraft's fuselage's underbelly, with the flight's crew cancelling the take-off and returning to the ...
On 6 March 2003, Air Algérie Flight 6289 crashed at 3:45 pm local time (1445 GMT). The flight was leaving Tamanrasset bound for Algiers with the co-pilot acting as pilot-in-command. At a height of 78 feet and a speed of 158 kts, the No. 1 engine suffered a turbine failure. The captain took control.
Flight 6289 was a flight from Tamanrasset, the capital of Tamanrasset Province, to the Algerian capital of Algiers with a stopover in Ghardaia. The flight was popular for Algerians and tourists as Tamanrasset was known for its archaeological sites and was the capital of the Tuareg people. The fare was also described as fairly cheap.
On 28 January 2004 at 21:00 the flight 7T-VIN of Tassili Airlines. The Sonatrach company chartered one of Tassili Airlines Beechcraft 1900D planes to fly two employees from the oil fields near the Algerian Sahara town of Hassi R'Mel to Ghardaia. The Beech took off at 20:36 and arrived near Ghardaia twenty minutes later.
Airlines Destinations; Air Algérie: Algiers, [3] El Bayadh, [3] Oran, [4] Tindouf [5] Tassili Airlines: Algiers [6] See also. List of airports in Algeria; References
In 1944 it was turned over to the Algerian government and used occasionally by Air Transport Command aircraft on the North African route until the end of the war. The airport is named for President Mohamed Boudiaf.