Air China to resume direct flights to N. Korea on March 30


By AGENCY
Tourists on board the K27 train bound for Pyongyang at Beijing Railway Station on March 12. On March 30, Air China will operate its first flight since the pandemic to Pyongyang from Beijing. — AFP

Air China will resume direct flights between Beijing (China) and Pyongyang (North Korea) from March 30, according to tour agencies and the state-owned carrier's website, after train services between the two capitals resumed recently. 

China is North Korea's largest trading partner and a vital source of diplomatic, economic and political support for the isolated nuclear state.

However, travel between the East Asian neighbours has been heavily curtailed since 2020 under strict border closures during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Flight CA121 is scheduled to leave Beijing Capital Airport at 8.05am on March 30 and arrive in Pyongyang International Airport at 11am (12pm Malaysian time), according to Air China's website.

A return flight is scheduled for 12pm (1pm in Malaysia) the same day.

The flight is scheduled each Monday, with economy class tickets from Beijing available for between CNY2,340 (RM1,333) and CNY2,930 (RM1,670).

China fully reopened its borders in 2023, but North Korea has been much more cautious.

The North's state-run Air Koryo restarted flights from Beijing to Pyongyang in 2023.

Passenger train services linking the two capitals were restarted on March 12 after a six-year pause.

Young Pioneer Tours, which specialises in travel to North Korea, said it had received confirmation from Air China that the flights from Beijing to Pyongyang would resume, its tour manager Rowan Beard said.

"Air China resuming its route to Beijing opens Pyongyang up to more accessible connections," he said.

"Previously, Air China also operated flights on Wednesdays and Fridays, so there is a possibility that additional services could be added again in the near future."

Chinese travel agencies have begun advertising tour packages to North Korea on social media, although there has been no official confirmation of the resumption of tourism.

The first passengers are likely to be students, workers, and those with family ties across the border.

While the announcement of flights was "promising" for tourism, "there is still no further confirmation regarding Western tourists", Beard said.

Some foreign tourists visited North Korea in April 2025 to attend the first Pyongyang Marathon since 2019.

However, this year's edition was abruptly cancelled last week "due to some reasons", according to a message from North Korean athletics authorities. -- AFP

 

 

 

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