Following on from our previous post, Ghana's Eagle Atlantic Airlines (EAB) has now received its Air Operator's Certificate from the Ghana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA), with plans now afoot to commence regional services, Dr Emmanuel Osei-Acheampong, Eagle Atlantic's Chief Executive Officer, has announced.
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Monday, August 12, 2013
■ UNITED STATES: Jetcraft Corporation acquires ExecuJet Aircraft Trading.
Jetcraft Corporation, a new and pre-owned business aircraft sales, acquisitions and trades company, has announced the acquisition of the aircraft brokerage activities of ExecuJet Aircraft Trading (EAT), the business aircraft sales division of ExecuJet Aviation Group, of Zurich, Switzerland.
Labels:
Execujet,
Jetcraft Corporation,
United States
■ MAURITIUS: Air Mauritius sees further losses during Q1 of its 2013/14 Financial Year.
Air Mauritius Group and Company have posted their results for Q1 of their 2013/2014 Financial Year which ended 30 June 2013 with losses of EUR8.1million (USD10.83million) and EUR8.3million (USD11.1million) respectively. Despite the red, the figures are an improvement on the same period for its previous financial year in which it posted losses of EUR10.2 million and EUR10.4 million respectively.
Labels:
2013/2014 Financial Year,
Air Mauritius,
Finances,
Loss,
Mauritius,
Q1
► TUNISIA: Syphax Airlines given greenlight to deploy its A330; long haul ops possibly due in autumn.
Tunisian private operator, Syphax Airlines (FS), has at long last been granted authorisation to use its A330-200 (MCN 345 | TS-IRA) by the Tunisian authorities (Office de l'Aviation Civile et des aéroports de Tunisie - OACA) following weeks of costly inactivity in Tunis where it has been undergoing scrutinization and checks.
Labels:
A330,
Airbus,
AOC,
Syphax Airlines,
Tunis,
Tunisia,
Tunisia Government
► ZAMBIA: Proflight mulls expansion into Tanzania, Mozambique, South Africa, the DRC and Zimbabwe.
With the recent launch of its first regional flights to Lilongwe, Malawi, Proflight Zambia (P0) is mulling adding three further international destinations to its growing network by mid-2014, effectively making Lusaka a regional hub for air travel.
Labels:
AOC,
Congo Kinshasa,
Dar es Salaam,
Harare,
Johannesburg,
Kafue Airlines,
Lanseria,
Lubumbashi,
Lusaka,
Mozambique,
Ndola,
Proflight Zambia,
Tanzania,
Tete,
Zambezi Airlines,
Zambia,
Zimbabwe
► NIGERIA: Jimoh Ibrahim says Air Nigeria will resume ops but only under new ownership.
Air Nigeria (VK) could make a return to the skies, albeit under new ownership and management, the current CEO of the airline, Mr Jimoh Ibrahim, has stated. Speaking on the tenth anniversary of the founding of his group of companies, Global Fleet, Mr Ibrahim said his board of directors would meet over the coming week to discuss the future of the airline, which ceased operations in September 2012.
► UGANDA: Government outlines its initial fleet requirements for Uganda Airlines 2.0.
Kampala is moving ahead with plans to resurrect defunct national carrier, Uganda Airlines (QU), following reports that government has already outlined its intended fleet requirements for twelve aircraft needed to service regional and international routes.
Labels:
Air Uganda,
Entebbe,
Uganda,
Uganda Airlines,
Uganda Government
Thursday, August 8, 2013
► GHANA: ASKY Airlines eyeing a secondary hub out of Kumasi as everyone complains about Nigeria.
Ethiopian Airlines' West African subsidiary, ASKY Airlines (KP), is reportedly considering turning Kumasi, Ghana into a secondary hub through the launch of direct flights to various West African capital cities and commercial centres. The move comes as domestic Ghanaian carrier Starbow Airlines (S9) is also planning a resumption and expansion of its regional services.
Labels:
Abidjan,
Accra,
ASKY Airlines,
Banjul,
Benin,
Burkina Faso,
Cote d'Ivoire,
Cotonou,
Gambia Bird,
Ghana,
Kumasi,
Kumasi Airport,
Lagos,
Launch,
NCAA,
Nigeria,
Ouagadougou,
Resumption,
Starbow
► ETHIOPIA: Russian Mil-8 chopper on WFP ferry flight to Juba crashes near Debre Zeyit; no casualties.
Labels:
Addis Ababa,
Debre Zeyit,
Djibouti,
ECAA,
Ethiopia,
Helicopter,
Incident,
Mil,
PANH Helicopters,
Russia,
South Sudan,
UAE,
United Nations,
World Food Program
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
■■ KENYA: Huge blaze rips through Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.
A devastating fire tore through the International Arrivals building and Unit 1 departures at Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta International Airport on Wednesday, August 7, forcing the local authorities to temporarily close the airfield until further notice. The fire was under control after three hours with no injuries, fatalities or damage to any aircraft thus far having been recorded. Kenya Airways did report that one member of its staff and a passenger had slight smoke inhalation and were safe in hospital for further investigation. The Kenya Civil Aviation Authority has granted clearance to the Kenya Airports Authority to use Unit 3 for international departures and arrivals.
■ SOUTH AFRICA: Regulator dismisses SAA's complaint against kulula regarding the latter's controversial ad campaign.
The Advertising Standards Authority of South Africa has reportedly dismissed a complaint brought by South African Airways (SA) against local rival LCC Kulula (MN) over the latter's use of the South African flag and slogan "The Most South African Airways" in an advertising campaign launched in March this year.
■ GHANA: Slovenian business aviation specialist, Elit'Avia, sets up shop in Accra.
Slovenia's Elit’Avia, a fully-integrated provider of business aircraft charter, management and operation services, has announced that it has opened an office in Accra, Ghana and is currently managing four business aircraft for West African clients, specifically: two Bombardier Global 6000s and a Bombardier Global XRS in Nigeria, plus a Dassault Falcon 2000 in Ghana. Management of these aircraft is a blend of both exclusive client use and charter availability.
■ MOZAMBIQUE: AdM issues tender for renovation, upgrade works for Maputo International Airport's runway 05/23.
Aeroportos de Moçambique (AdM) has reportedly issued a tender to all interested parties pertaining to the renovation, upgrading and expansion of Maputo International Airport's main 3'660m (12'007ft) long runway 05/23, apron, and other facilities including all airfield lighting systems. The project is Phase III of the airport's upgrading programme.
► SOUTH AFRICA: SAA jet suffers another false hijack alert, this time in Port Elizabeth.
A South African Airways (SA) jet operating as flight SA417 from Johannesburg to Port Elizabeth was yesterday met at Port Elizabeth International Airport by armed police and other emergency response teams after squawking that their aircraft had been hijacked. The incident turned out to be a false alarm.
■ KENYA: Mass delays at Nairobi JKIA after pipeline fault starves airport of Jet A1.
Nearly two thousand passengers, among them 49 athletes from the Kenyan athletics team heading to the IAAF Athletics World Championships in Moscow were, on the night of Monday August 5, stranded at Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta International Airport after the main pipeline supplying jet fuel to the airport malfunctioned resulting in the mass cancellation of flights.
► DJIBOUTI: Air France starts dedicated weekly flights to Djibouti from late October.
Air France (AF) will, from October 27, 2013, commence once weekly dedicated flights from Paris CDG to Djibouti Ambouli onboard an Airbus A340-300. As such, the current 3x weekly service to the Horn of Africa state which operates via Riyadh, Saudi Arabia will cease with effect from that date with flights to Riyadh increasing to 5x weekly.
Labels:
Air France,
Djibouti,
France,
Paris CDG,
Riyadh,
Route,
Saudi Arabia
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
►► SOUTH SUDAN: Rwandair postpones Juba flights 'til September.
[UPDATE 06 AUGUST] Rwandan national carrier, Rwandair (WB), will from 01JUL13 begin operations to South Sudan, with a 3x weekly Kigali – Juba service, on board CRJ900 aircraft.
■ NIGERIA: Evergreen Apple Nigeria appoint Joe McDermott as head of FBO operations.
Lagos-based aviation business Evergreen Apple Nigeria (EAN) has appointed Joe McDermott to the
newly created role of Head of Fixed-base operator (FBO) Operations. He will be based at the
Lagos headquarters and be responsible for managing all operations at its
fully integrated FBO facility based at Murtala Mohammed Airport, Lagos,
along with developing existing offices in Port Harcourt and Abuja that
currently manage EAN passenger requests in each location.
Labels:
EvergreenApple Nigeria,
Fixed Base Operator,
Lagos,
Nigeria
■ EGYPT: Cairo's proposed aerotropolis, "Cairo AeroCity", attracts $3billion in initial bids.
Egypt's new Minister of Civil Aviation, Mr Abdel Aziz Fadel, says Cairo International Airport's Aerotropolis proposal, dubbed Cairo AeroCity, has thus far attracted USD3billion in initial bids in spite of the unstable political situation currently prevailing in the country.
■ SIERRA LEONE: Transport Ministry pitches Freetown to Delta Airlines in bid to lure more US carriers.
Sierra Leone’s Transport and Aviation Minister, Mr. Leonard Balogun Koroma, says his country has submitted all the necessary documents and information to Delta Airlines (DL) in the hopes of luring the US carrier to the capital Freetown. Delta's West African network currently consists of Dakar, Monrovia, Lagos and Accra.
► LIBYA: Qatar Airways A320 diverts to Alexandria after militia forces Tripoli tower to deny landing permission.
Qatar Airways (QR) has once again been victimized in Libya, this time in Tripoli when on Sunday, August 4, an armed militia are said to have forced Tripoli ATC tower staff to deny an inbound Qatar Airways A320 permission to land, instead forcing it to divert to Alexandria, Egypt. The flight, QR528, then refuelled and returned to Qatar.
Labels:
Alexandria,
Doha,
Egypt,
Incident,
Libya,
Qatar,
Qatar Airways,
Tripoli
■ TANZANIA: Zanzibari lawmakers irate at cost overruns, poor workmanship at new airport terminal.
► TUNISIA: British Airways suspends London Gatwick - Tunis from late October.
British Airways (BA) has announced that from October 25, it will cease its 3x weekly flights from London Gatwick to Tunis, Tunisia citing a lack of profitability on the route. Currently, both the B737-400 and the A319 are used to service the route.
Labels:
British Airways,
London Gatwick,
Route,
Termination,
Tunis,
Tunisia,
United Kingdom
■ CONGO (BRAZZAVILLE): Djambala International Airport's runway inaugurated.
The Republic of Congo's third international airport, situated in Djambala, 400km north of Brazzaville, has seen its runway inaugurated following the arrival of a Trans Air Congo (Q8) B737-300 carrying a delegation of government suits and bureaucrats late last week. The project was launched in 2001.
Monday, August 5, 2013
► GHANA: Aero Surveys Ltd appoints Sukhjinder Mann CFO of Starbow Airlines.
The board of directors and management of Aero Surveys Limited, operators of Ghana's Starbow Airlines (S9), have announced the appointment of Mr Sukhjinder Mann to the position of Chief Financial Officer. Mr Mann arrived at the airline 7 months ago as the Financial Controller and has been the acting CFO for over 3 months.
Labels:
Accra,
Ghana,
Starbow Airlines
● IATA: Strong domestic pax traffic in Ghana, Nigeria, Ethiopia & the DRC buoys African growth as cargo ekes up in June.
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has released its June passenger demand figures showing year-on-year global growth of 6.0%. Africa saw a growth of 11.2% with African airlines benefiting from strong domestic economic growth in key markets such as Ghana, Nigeria, Ethiopia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. While global air freight demand figures showed a 1.2% year-on-year expansion, Africa's figures showed growth in June of 2.4% on June 2012.
Labels:
Cargo,
Congo Kinshasa,
Ethiopia,
Ghana,
IATA,
Nigeria,
Passenger Traffic Bulletin
■ ETHIOPIA: Australia, Ethiopia sign Bilateral Air Services Agreement.
Ethiopia and Australia have reportedly signed a Bilateral Air Services Agreement in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. Present at the signing ceremony last week was the Director General of the Ethiopian Civil Aviation Authority (ECAA), Colonel Wesenyeleh
Hunegnaw, and the Australian Ambassador to Ethiopia, Ms Lisa Filipetto.
► SOUTH AFRICA: Eleven BA-Comair B737s suffer mass grounding over expired parts.
The South African Civil Aviation Authority (SACAA) on Friday, August 2, reportedly grounded eleven of British Airways-Comair's aircraft after they were found to be flying with components whose life-cycle expired in August 2012.
Labels:
737-300,
737-400,
BA Comair,
Cape Town,
Comair Ltd,
Durban,
Grounding,
Johannesburg,
MRO,
SAA Technical,
SACAA,
South Africa
► TANZANIA: Air Tanzania to tentatively operate MA60s, Y12s as part of deal with China's JoyAir.
Air Tanzania (TC) is reportedly to acquire five Xian MA60s and three Harbin Y-12 turboprops (whether they are on lease or outright purchase is unclear) from JoyAir (JR), a Chinese carrier that is 95% owned by China's state-backed aircraft manufacturer and Xian's parent, the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), with the remaining 5% held by China Eastern Airlines (MU).
Labels:
Air Tanzania,
AVIC,
China,
China Eastern Airlines,
Equipment,
F50,
Fokker,
Harbin Y12,
JoyAir,
MA-60,
Tanzania,
Xian
■ KENYA: Kenya Airways releases its Operations Report for Q1 FY2013/14.
Kenya Airways (KQ) has released its
Operations Report for the First Quarter of its 2013/14 Financial Year. Overall, the company put into the market place a total capacity of 3'464million seat kilometres which gives a year on year growth of 3.0%. During this quarter the airline successfully launched three weekly operations into Livingstone, the third destination in Zambia after Lusaka and Ndola.
Labels:
2013/2014 Financial Year,
Kenya,
Kenya Airways,
Operations Report,
Q1
► NIGERIA: Turkish Airlines to start 4x weekly Ndjamena via Kano flights from December.
In line with an announcement made in mid-March during the commissioning of the newly renovated and expanded international terminal at Malam Aminu Kano International Airport (MAKIA), Turkish Airlines (TK) are set to begin 4x weekly flights from Istanbul to Ndjamena, Chad via Kano, Nigeria with effect from December 12. Flights will operate using a Boeing 737-800.
Friday, August 2, 2013
► RÉUNION: Air Austral concedes that any A380 delivery would not be in an all-economy configuration.
La Réunion-based carrier Air Austral (UU) CEO Marie-Joesph Malé says his carrier will not take delivery of the A380 in an all-economy lay out citing the threat to its premium traffic such a layout would present to the airline's overall viability.
Labels:
A380,
Air Austral,
Airbus,
Reunion
Thursday, August 1, 2013
► SOUTH AFRICA: Gryphon Airlines to début Johannesburg to Gabon, Congo & Benin flights in November.
Labels:
1Time,
Benin,
Congo Kinshasa,
Cotonou,
Gabon,
Gryphon Ailrines,
Johannesburg,
Kinshasa,
Launch,
Libreville,
McDonnell Douglas,
MD83,
Route,
South Africa
► CONGO (KINSHASA): Air Kasaï now leasing a B737-200Adv from Gryphon Airlines.
Kinshasa-based Air Kasaï has added a B737-200Adv (MSN 22123 | ZS-EVE) to its fleet on lease from South Africa's Gryphon Airlines. Air Kasai also operates the Congo's sole ATR72-200 and various smaller Antonovs.
Labels:
737-200,
Air Kasaï,
Congo Kinshasa,
Equipment,
Gemena,
Goma,
Gryphon Airlines,
Kinshasa,
Kisangani,
Lubumbashi,
Mbandaka,
Mbuji Mayi
► ANGOLA: SonAir becomes first operator to resume Super Puma EC225 flights following grounding.
Angolan carrier, SonAir (SOR), Africa’s largest oil and gas helicopter operator, has become the first operator to resume passenger transportation flights with the suspended Eurocopter Super Puma EC225 fleet. Three flights were performed successfully with two EC225s from Luanda to two offshore platforms.
Labels:
Angola,
EASA,
Eurocopter,
Luanda,
Resumption,
SonAir,
Super Puma
► BURUNDI: Kenya Airways adds double daily flights to Bujumbura.
Kenya Airways (KQ) has increased its flights between Nairobi and Bujumbura, Burundi with the recent introduction of two daily direct flights; one in the evening and one in the morning operating on board an Embraer E170. Overall, there are now 21 weekly frequencies between the East African capitals.
► MAURITIUS: Air Mauritius has no plans to acquire any new planes before 2020: Deenanath
Air Mauritius (MK) Vice President (Business Sector) Mr Raj Deenanath has stated that his airline does not plan to acquire any new aircraft before 2020 despite recent comments made by Chairman Appalsamy Thomas stating that new aircraft would be a "real game changer" for the struggling airline.
► KENYA: Saudia Cargo relaunches its Nairobi hub; adds 23 new African destinations via interline deals.
Saudi Airlines cargo division, Saudia Cargo (SV), has announced the re-launch of its Nairobi, Kenya hub along with the expansion of its network coverage into sub-Saharan Africa. Saudia Cargo currently serves six other freighter
destinations in Africa, namely: Addis Ababa, Johannesburg, Kano,
Khartoum, Lagos and N’Djamena. Saudia also offers a Lagos, Nigeria hub focussing on West Africa.
Labels:
Antananarivo,
Brazzaville,
Bujumbura,
Dar es Salaam,
Djibouti,
Douala,
Entebbe,
Harare,
Juba,
Kigali,
Kinshasa,
Libreville,
Lilongwe,
Luanda,
Lusaka,
Maputo,
Mogadishu,
Moroni,
Nairobi,
Saudia Cargo
■ NIGERIA: Benin Airport temporarily shut down by IRS over tax evasion allegations.
Nigeria's Inland Revenue Services (IRS) acting on behalf of the Edo State Government, temporarily closed Benin Airport on Monday over allegations of tax evasion by airport workers. The move resulted in numerous flights to both Abuja and Lagos being cancelled.
Labels:
Benin City,
FAAN,
George Uriesi,
Legal,
Nigeria,
Nigeria Government,
Tax
► SOUTH AFRICA: British Airways reduces Johannesburg service from March 2014.
British Airways (BA) is to tentatively reduce its London Heathrow – Johannesburg operation with effect from 3 March 2014, with overall frequencies being reduced from 17x to 14x weekly. This is mainly due to the introduction of the Airbus A380 aircraft on the route, scheduled to enter service 3x weekly with effect from 12 February 2014 and which will increase to 6x weekly from 10 March 2014.
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
■ ALGERIA: Fire in Algiers Houari Boumediene Airport control tower temporarily disrupts flights.
Authorities
at Algiers Houari Boumediene International Airport were on Monday, July
29 forced to divert all inbound flights to Wahran and Annaba airports
after a fire broke out in the control tower at 18h00L.
■ LIBYA: Italy's Salini-Impregilo reawarded Kufrah International Airport upgrade contract.
Italian construction conglomerate, Salini-Impregilo, have had a 2010 contract to renovate and upgrade the airport at Al Kufra in the south-eastern Libyan desert, reactivated with construction set to go ahead from the end of August.
Labels:
Construction,
Infrastructure,
Kufrah,
Libya,
Salini-Impregilo
► UNITED STATES: JetBlue, South African Airways ink codeshare deal.
US-based domestic and regional carrier, JetBlue Airways (B6), and South African Airways (SA) have announced a bilateral codeshare agreement aimed at connecting the carriers’ networks via New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) and Washington’s Dulles International Airport (IAD). While the agreement is still pending U.S. Department of Transport regulatory approval and subject to receipt of foreign government operating authority, it will allow customers to purchase a single ticket combining SAA and
JetBlue-operated flights and is an expansion of an interline agreement first inked in 2010.
■ BOTSWANA: Parliamentary inquest picks holes in Air Botswana's operations, finances.
A Batswana parliamentary inquest into the operations of state-owned national carrier, Air Botswana (BP) has uncovered purported oversights in the airline's fuel procurement, fleet selection and employee accountability procedures.
► TANZANIA: Precision Air goes all prop as last 737 is withdrawn from service.
Tanzania's Precision Air (PW) has reportedly retired its last remaining B737-300 (MSN 28573 | 5H-PKS) from service with the aircraft now listed by a US-based leasing firm as being available for either sale or lease immediately. The move effectively leaves the Dar-es-Salaam based carrier with an exclusively turboprop fleet of five ATR42s and five ATR72-500s.
Labels:
737-300,
ATR,
Equipment,
Precision Air,
Tanzania
► NAMIBIA: Kenya Airways, Air Namibia sign codeshare agreement.
Kenya Airways (KQ) and Air Namibia (SW) have announced the signing of a new code-share agreement paving the way for daily connections between the airlines’ Nairobi and Windhoek hubs through Johannesburg in South Africa and Lusaka in Zambia. This code-share agreement with Air Namibia brings the total number of
code-share arrangements that Kenya Airways has signed with other
international carriers to twenty.
Labels:
Air Namibia,
Codeshare,
Johannesburg,
KAA,
Kenya,
Kenya Airways,
Lusaka,
Nairobi,
Namibia,
Namibia Airports Company,
South Africa,
Windhoek,
Zambia
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