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St Helena opens for business

25 Oct 2017 - by Dave Marsh
Comments | 0

FOR over 500 years the

only way to get to St

Helena was by ship.

Yet this remote,

extraordinarily scenic and

historic tropical island in the

Atlantic has been of such

strategic importance that at

one time a thousand ships

would call there in a year

when it played a key role in

expanding Britain’s global

trade.

Last weekend that changed

when Airlink started a weekly

service using the new airport

carved out of the side of the

island by SA construction

company, Basil Read.

Islanders watched from

the surrounding mountains

and wept in the new airport

building as the Airlink flight

touched down and ushered in

a new era.

Until now a five-day voyage

on the RMS St Helena from

Cape Town was the quickest

way to visit the island and,

as the ship carried on to

Ascension Island, it was 18

days before one could be back

in Cape Town.

Using one of its new Embraer

E190 jets, Airlink’s flight from

Windhoek is under four hours.

The aircraft starts the flight in

Johannesburg and refuels in

Windhoek, at the same time

collecting passengers from a

synchronised flight from

Cape Town.

One of the first places

where slavery was prohibited,

St Helena became the naval

centre for British efforts to

wipe out slavery, rescuing

some 25 000 slaves. After the

Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon

was imprisoned and died

there. Some six thousand Boer

prisoners of war were sent

there and so too was Zulu

King Dinuzulu kaCetshwayo,

imprisoned for 10 years in

1890 for leading a rebellion

against the British. Later,

25 Zulu chiefs were exiled to

the island for resisting the

British poll tax in Natal.

Rich in history and old world

charm, the island offers a

variety of activities on land and

sea. Example: In warm

tropical waters of up to

26 degrees in January to

March, it is probable rather

than possible for snorkellers

to swim with whale sharks.

With the inauguration of

a scheduled air service,

the government of St

Helena is very active in

stimulating the development

of tourism.

The first fruits of the new

infrastructure include the

Mantis group opening a

new hotel on a prime site in

Jamestown.

Mantis founder, Adrian

Gardiner, told TNW he had

been in negotiations with

St Helena authorities

since the idea of the

airport was originally

mooted ten years ago.

As a result, he was given

first choice when the

government identified a

number of possible sites.

The Mantis 30-room hotel

increases the number of

rooms on the island by

over 50%.

Look out for TNW’s special

feature on St Helena in a

forthcoming issue.

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