Yahoo – AFP,
Jean Liou, April 14, 2015
![]() |
The edge of
the runway of the future airport of the island of Saint Helena,
currently under
construction in Jamestown (AFP Photo/Jean Liou)
|
Jamestown
(AFP) - The tiny South Atlantic island of Saint Helena -- where Napoleon died
in exile -- dreams of becoming a tourist draw when its first airport opens next
year despite fears it cannot accommodate an influx of visitors.
For years
only accessible by boat, St Helena has just one bank, no cash machine and no
mobile telephone reception.
Sailing out
to St Helena from Cape Town every three weeks, the boat journey takes five long
days. Because the island is so remote, only 1,500 tourists visit each year.
But the
tourism office hopes the weekly 4.5-hour passenger flights scheduled to start
from Johannesburg in February 2016 will change that -- and the island's economy
-- forever.
Its
director Cathy Alberts says she expects 30,000 tourists a year, and voices hope
that the change will help St Helena become self-sufficient.
![]() |
Future
airport of the island of Saint Helena,
currently under construction in
Jamestown
(AFP Photo/Jean Liou)
|
"We
talk about 600 people per week. So it's not that much," Alberts said.
"It is doable, absolutely. As the demand increases, people will start
providing the services."
Visitors
will have several days in St Helena, ample time to see the local sights,
including the house where Napoleon, France's greatest military hero, died on
May 5, 1821.
But not
everyone is happy with the change.
View
galleryFuture airport of the island of Saint Helena,
currently …
Future
airport of the island of Saint Helena, currently under construction in
Jamestown (AFP Photo/J …
The idea of
crowds of camera-wielding tourists worries many of the island's 4,200
residents, who worry the island cannot meet such a demand.
"You
can imagine the chaos on the roads," said Niall O'Keefe, who heads local
development company Enterprise St Helena.
Island
life threatened?
Local
officials say change would not come instantaneously.
"In 10
years, I see St Helena livelier, with more people, more restaurants, more
shops," the island's governor Mark Capes said.
"But
it will not be a big bang, it will not happen overnight."
Hoteliers
are lobbying for a second flight to Britain, home to most of the island's
tourists.
"To
have two flights a week, we will need to double our hotel capacity,"
finance official Dax Richards said, adding that a surge in demand would swamp
St Helena's meagre facilities.
View
galleryJamestown, the capital of the South Atlantic
island …
Jamestown,
the capital of the South Atlantic island of Saint Helena (AFP Photo/Jean Liou)
Currently,
the island offers just 85 tourists beds for tourists and a few self-catering
units.
Beds are
just part of the problem. Because of its remoteness and dependence on funding,
the island's infrastructure is lacking.
Some in the
tourism industry worry that well-heeled visitors will be disappointed by
unprofessional service -- or problems like garbage in the Jamestown moat -- and
vent their disappointment on influential travel websites.
Others fear
something worse: that the island could lose its soul.
"I
hope we don't lose our cohesion, our sense of solidarity," tour guide
Basil George said. "That's my fear with the airport, not the airport
itself."
Building
the airport has already disturbed the island, which is framed by craggy
volcanic cliffs soaring hundreds of metres above sea level and enjoys a mild
climate despite being located near the equator.
A
construction crew of 600 has had a big impact during the four-year project,
which included chipping away at a mountain and backfilling an entire valley.
Today the
runway, 1,950 metres (yards) long and 45 metres wide, ends just before the
cliff drops a dramatic 300 metres into the Atlantic Ocean.
![]() |
Jamestown,
the capital of the South Atlantic island of Saint Helena
(AFP Photo/Jean Liou)
|
Funded by
the British government and built by a South African construction company, the
airport cost £250 million (350 million euros, $370 million).
Airport
heralds revolution
When South
African airline Comair's Boeing 737-800 flights begin, up to 138 passengers
will travel into St Helena each week -- roughly the same number of people who
arrive every three weeks by boat.
But the
runway being built at the island's eastern tip is not long enough to
accommodate larger aircraft flying from Europe.
The airport
project also includes the construction of a 14-kilometre (nine-mile) access
road, which leads into a valley near the capital Jamestown, where a new wharf
is being built for £20 million (28 million euros, $30 million).
Before the
first plane lifts off, cell phone service is expected to start -- another major
upheaval.
Whatever
locals think, they must soon accept the inevitable reality that after years in
isolation, St Helena is joining the rest of the world.



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