Advertisement
Aviation
WorldAfrica

First commercial flight for new airport at St Helena, the isolated Atlantic island where Napoleon died in exile

New weekly flight, via Windhoek in Namibia, will mean that the island will be reachable by air from South Africa in just six hours

2-MIN READ2-MIN
The runway on St Helena is located on a breathtaking mountain just 300 metres from the sea. Photo: Alamy
Agence France-Presse

Life for the people of St Helena was poised to change forever Saturday when the first regular commercial flight from the outside world touches down on the remote island’s windswept new runway.

The British island of just over 4,000 people, where the locals are called “Saints”, is known best as the rocky outcrop where French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte saw out his final days.

Now, after five years of construction, controversy and embarrassing delays due to high winds, an airport built at a cost of £285 million (US$378 million) will welcome its first routine flight from Johannesburg.

Advertisement

The volcanic tropical island itself measures just 122 square kilometres and is located almost exactly halfway between Africa and South America.

Its isolated location meant it was chosen as a place of exile for those who suffered defeat at the hands of the British, with Napoleon held there from 1815 until his death in 1821.

Advertisement

Several thousand Boer prisoners of war were also detained there at the start of the 20th century.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x