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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
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Tassili Airlines was originally established in 1998 as a joint venture between Air Algérie (49%) and the Sonatrach company (51%), both of which are government-owned. [citation needed] Commercial services were launched on 8 April 1999, with a flight from Hassi Messaoud to Algiers.
Air transport division of Société Africaine des Transports Tropicaux. Operated Douglas DC-3, Lockheed Lodestar [3] Aérotechnique Alger-Duclos: AEROTEC: 1948: 1962 [4] Afric Air: 1964: 1969: Operated Douglas C-47: Air Afrique: 1937: 1941 [5] Antinea Airlines: HO: DJA: ANTINEA: 1999: 2003: Compagnie Air Transport: 1946: 1953: Subsidiary of Air ...
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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 ...
A joint venture between Air Algérie (49%) and Sonatrach (51%) in 1998 established the passenger airline company Tassili Airlines. Commercial services were launched on 8 April 1999 with a flight from Hassi Messaoud to Algiers. In 2005, Air Algérie withdrew 50% of its funds in the airline, which thus became 76% owned by Sonatrach.
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.