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Cape Town (CPT) (Cape Town International), 22km (16 miles) east of the city. To/from the airport: Inter-Cape buses run 24 hours and meet all incoming and outgoing flights. Courtesy buses are operated by some hotels. Taxis
are available, with a surcharge after 2300 (travel time - 20 minutes); Touch Down Taxis are the officially authorised airport taxi firm. Facilities: Duty-free shop, car hire, bank/bureau de change and restaurant/bar. Bloemfontein (BFN) (Bloemfontein International), 10km (6 miles) east of the city (travel time – 15 minutes). To/from the airport: There is an airport shuttle bus to the city centre (leaving from outside the airport building). Taxis are also available.
Facilities: ATMs, restaurants, car hire and conference facilities. Durban (DUR) (Durban International), 18km (11 miles) southwest of the city (travel time – 20 minutes). To/from the airport: Airport buses and taxis are available to the city. Facilities: Duty-free shop, car hire, bank/bureau de change and bar/restaurant. Johannesburg (JNB) (Johannesburg International), 22km (14 miles) east of the city (travel time – 35 minutes). To/from the airport: Bus services to Pretoria and Johannesburg are available. Buses link Kempton Park with Johannesburg. Taxis are available. Courtesy
coaches are operated by some major hotels. Facilities: Duty-free shops, post office, car hire, bank/bureau de change, medical clinic, conference facilities, restaurant and bar.
Port Elizabeth (PLZ) (Port Elizabeth International) is 5km (3 miles) west of the Capital Business District. To/from the airport: There is an airport shuttle bus to the main international hotels in Port Elizabeth upon request. Taxis are also available.
Facilities: ATM, conference facilities, information desk (tel: (41) 507 7319), restaurants and pubs, shops, pharmacy, postal services,
car hire. For more information regarding airports, contact Airports Company South Africa (tel: (11) 723 1400; website: www.airports.co.za).
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There are main routes into South Africa from Botswana (via Ramatlabama), Lesotho, Mozambique (now open after a long war –
check with local police about state of road and safety), Namibia, Swaziland and Zimbabwe (via Beit Bridge).
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