Reuters
GENEVA,
Switzerland -- International air passenger travel,
recovering from the Iraq war and global health scares,
grew 5.9 percent in January against the same month
last year, said the airlines body IATA.
Freight
traffic, a key indicator of trends in world trade,
which is also picking up after two years of stagnation,
was up 11.2 percent, according to IATA, the Geneva-based
International Air Transport Association.
"This
is a good start towards achieving the seven percent
annual growth in global passenger traffic and 4.4
percent in cargo that we have forecast for 2004,"
said IATA Director General Giovanni Bisignani in
a comment issued with the figures.
Both
passengers and cargo numbers showed an upswing in
the last quarter of 2003.
All
IATA's six global regions, including Europe and
North America, reported solid increases in passenger
numbers in January.
By
far the biggest percentage rise was the Middle East,
which saw passengers up by 30.3 percent and cargo
by 31.8 percent against January 2003, when travel
in and across the region declined sharply as the
invasion of Iraq loomed.
But
in passenger-figure terms the region accounts for
just over two percent of the world totals.
North
America, the biggest region with some 40 percent
of all world traffic, saw a growth of 3.3 percent
in international travel in January despite tougher
security at U.S. airports.
Freight,
however, declined in North America -- which also
covers Canada - by 4.9 pct, reflecting the continuing
slow pace of cargo recovery in the region from the
setbacks of the early part of last year.
Passenger
traffic in Europe, which has an average of around
30 percent of total travelers, increased by 3.8
percent, while cargo was up by eight percent.
In
the Asia-Pacific region, hit hard at the start of
last year by the spread of the deadly SARS, passengers
were up 6.3 percent and cargo by 13.9 percent.
South
America, which accounts for some five percent of
all international passenger traffic, saw an increase
of 3.3 percent, and Africa, which has nearly three
percent of the global total, was up by 7.3 percent.
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