Hong Kong leader’s visit set to unlock Kazakh flights, with incentives eyed
Hong Kong-based airline exploring launching such flights up to three times a week but details are being ironed out

A lack of direct flights has been a bugbear to Hong Kong and Kazakhstan forging closer ties but with the city’s leader now in Astana and hints of incentives on the table, hopes are rising for a breakthrough.
It is understood that a Hong Kong-based airline is now exploring launching such flights up to three times a week, but the details are being ironed out.
Asel Suankulova, managing director of Kazakh Invest’s Investment Promotion and Marketing Department, told the South China Morning Post that the country was open to offering subsidies to Hong Kong-based airlines to revive direct flights, which she described as vital for strengthening business ties.
She also expressed confidence in demand for a Hong Kong-Kazakhstan route, pointing to the success of the Milan-Almaty service launched four years ago.
“Direct flights are vital,” she said in an interview on Monday, adding that they impacted not only investment, but also trade, tourism and how well people understood each other.
Suankulova noted that after the Almaty-Milan route was relaunched in 2022, the number of visa applications from Kazakhs to visit Italy had increased 15-fold.
“When they did the initial projections, they expected 80 per cent capacity,” she said. “But it was never 80 per cent – it was always 100 per cent. They even had to increase the number of flights … and Milan is not the cheapest city to go visit.”