Mar 31, 2011
DPA
Phnom Penh – Air France’s first commercial flight to Phnom Penh in nearly four decades landed in the Cambodian capital on Thursday.
The arrival of flight AF274 marked the resumption of a service that the company terminated in 1974 as the Khmer Rouge was on the cusp of taking control of Cambodia.
The chief executive of Air France KLM, Pierre-Henri Gourgeon, said the reopening of the service to Phnom Penh after 37 years was ‘really emotional.’
‘(Cambodia) is a country that developed (bonds) in the past very strongly with France,’ he said. ‘We feel we are in a French-speaking area. We understand the culture.’
Air France ended its service in mid-1974 because ‘instability was worryingly high,’ he said.
Within a year Pol Pot’s ultra-Maoist movement had captured the capital. The Khmer Rouge held power for nearly four years during which as many as 2.2 million Cambodians died.
Gourgeon said Air France would run three flights a week between the two countries, and confirmed a future schedule could include Siem Reap, the country’s tourism centre and home to the famed Angkor Wat temple complex.
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