Saturday, November 30, 2013

Kazan 737 crash crew received 'pull up' warnings


Pilots of the Tatarstan Boeing 737-300 which crashed during a go-around at Kazan received sink-rate and “pull up” orders from the ground-proximity warning system as it entered its fatal descent.

But preliminary information from Russia’s Interstate Aviation Committee states that there was no “significant” pitch deviation from the control column as the aircraft dove towards the ground.

The jet, arriving from Moscow on 17 November, sharply climbed to 700m (2,300ft) during the go-around despite missed approach procedures showing a level-off altitude of 500m.

Friday, November 29, 2013

Malawi Airlines could operate ten aircraft & widebodies by 2018

Ethiopian Airlines CEO Tewolde Gebremariam sees his airline's latest venture, Malawi Airlines, operating up to ten aircraft by 2018. Speaking to RootsOnline, Mr Gebremariam says he sees the distinct possibility of the Malawian subsidiary operating widebodies as well. 

A joint venture between the Malawian government, Malawian private investors and Ethiopian Airlines, Malawi Airlines is scheduled to launch flights out of Blantyre and Lilongwe on January 1 using a B737-800 and a Dash 8-400 to serve Mozambique, Zambia, Tanzania, Zimbabwe and South Africa. 

Norwegian launches its new route to Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood with its third Boeing 787



Norwegian Air Shuttle  today launched its first nonstop flight from Scandinavia to Fort Lauderdale /  Hollywood in South Florida. The first flight departed from Copenhagen. Tomorrow is the first nonstop flight to Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood from Oslo and on Sunday from Stockholm. The flight took off with Norwegian’s third and newest 787-8 (EI-LNC, msn 34795) which was delivered on November 27.

Malaysia's Caterham, Berjaya Air consider business class venture


Caterham Jet could take a 51% stake in Berjaya Air as AirAsia and Caterham CEO, Tony Fernandez, eyes offering scheduled business class jet services within the region. 

Malaysia's Star reports that despite being established over two years ago, Caterham has been unable to obtain an Air Operators Certificate and is in talks with Berjaya for this reason. It had planned to offer “super-premium” services to Jakarta Soekarno-Hatta, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi and Singapore Changi using two CRJ-700s. 

British Airways holds talks with Chinese carriers

British Airways has held talks with various Chinese carriers including Spring Airlines, China Eastern Airlines and Sichuan Airlines as it looks to boost its presence in the world's second largest economy. 

Speaking to Bloomberg newswire at the CAPA World Aviation Summit, IAG CEO, Willie Walsh, said British Airways had been "very late into China" due to relatively poor Sino-Anglo trade links and a lack of flight slots at its London Heathrow hub.

However, services to Chengdu, added after the purchase of bmi british midland freed up 42 slots, are exceeding expectations. “It is a huge market,” he said. “There is a long list of cities in China we see with opportunities.” In addition to Chengdu, British Airways' Chinese network is limited to Beijing Capital and Shanghai Pudong flights.

Source: CH-Aviation

Airline Operators Elect New Leadership after 14 Years

Capt Nogie Meggison
The Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON) has elected the Chief Executive Officer of Jed Air, Captain Nogie Meggison, as its chairman for the next two years, while Mr. Yvan Drewinsky, the Chief Operating Officer of Dana Air was elected Vice-President.

The election was conducted by an independent organisation, Banwo and Ighodalo during the Annual General Meeting ( AGM ) of the body held in Lagos yesterday.

Etihad Airways boosts capacity between Abu Dhabi, Melbourne

Etihad Airways, the national airline of the UAE, will add more seats between Abu Dhabi and Melbourne by introducing a Boeing 777-300ER to the route.

The larger aircraft, to start operating from December 1, will offer 328 seats in a three-class configuration - 36 more than the Airbus A340-600 which is currently flying the Abu Dhabi-Melbourne sector. The three-class Boeing 777-300ER has eight seats in Diamond First Class, 40 in Pearl Business Class, and 280 in Coral Economy Class. Etihad commenced flights between Abu Dhabi and Melbourne in 2009.

KENYA AIRWAYS INCREASES FREQUENCIES AHEAD OF HOLIDAYS


Kenya Airways has increased it's frequency to 11 destinations starting next month as the airline prepares for an anticipated surge during the festive season. The airline will fly to Malindi seven times every week, up from the current six times and Mombasa, to which it will fly 88 times. Other destinations include; Tanzania, South Sudan, Botswana, Madagascar and Seychelles.

Source: The Star

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Rwanda national airline, ex-boss in sh201m battle


The ex-boss of Rwanda Air Limited in Uganda Sheila Tendo and the carrier are battling over sh201.5m, purportedly owed to Tendo as damages for unfair dismissal.

On November 19, Tendo filed a suit at the High Court in Kampala through Barya, Byamugisha, and Company Advocates. Her services were terminated on September 22, 2008.

China's Spring Airlines signs up for 30 A320-200s

Spring Airlines has signed an agreement with Airbus Industrie for thirty additional A320-200s with plans to potentially acquire more in the future. According to Bloomberg, the Shanghai-based airline signed the agreement on November 22 with deliveries scheduled for 2015 onwards. 

The deal is still subject to Chinese government approval. With its current fleet standing at thirty-seven A320-200s and one A320-200 (sl), the carrier has plans to building a fleet of over 100 planes by 2020. Previous more ambitious plans were revised downwards following delays in obtaining Beijing's bureaucratic okay.

Source: CH-Aviation

Air Arabia turns 10; over 60 destinations served from Sharjah Airport

To celebrate its 10th anniversary of operations at the end of October, Air Arabia has created a special
livery for one of its 28 Sharjah-based A320s. From its base in the UAE Air Arabia now connects
to over 60 airports ranging from Lar in Iran (187 kilometres) to Chittagong in Bangladesh (3,720 kilometres).
Air Arabia began operations from its Sharjah base on 28 October 2003 with a flight to Bahrain. Beirut, Damascus, Kuwait and Muscat services were added almost immediately, as the airline sought to replicate the success of low-cost carriers in the US and Europe. 

City urged to delay Porter Airlines expansion decision




Toronto city staff is recommending that council delay a decision on Porter Airlines’ expansion plans until March 2015.

City staff made the recommendation in a new report released on Thursday and a news conference is scheduled for 2 p.m. at city hall to discuss the findings.

Unions agree to 1'900 Air France job cuts


Air France trade unions have approved a voluntary staff-reduction plan aimed at removing 1'826 ground staff from the airline's payroll. In its report, France24 said three unions had approved the move, part of the second phase of the French carrier's long-term Transform 2015 initiative which will see its workforce reduced by 2'800 jobs in total.

Shaheen Air starts domestic flights from Peshawar

Shaheen Air has added Peshawar (PEW) in the north of Pakistan, to its domestic network from its main base at Karachi (KHI). The twice-weekly flights (Mondays and Sundays) started on 24 November, and will be operated using the airline’s 737-400s. 

The 1,090-kilometre route is already served by Air Indus (daily flights), airblue (daily flights) and PIA (four weekly flights). Shaheen Air already operates international flights from Peshawar to several destinations in the Middle East including Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Muscat, Riyadh and Sharjah.

Source: Anna.Aero

Small Jets, Used Jets, and New Jets: What They Mean for Airline Investors

One of the largest costs for airlines are the aircraft themselves. With new wide-body jets easily topping the $100 million mark and narrow-body and regional jets still costing in the tens of millions, it's easy to see why choosing the right planes is important. On top of that are other variables such as fuel, maintenance, and route capability. Here I'll look at the variety of fleet strategies and future plans employed by some airlines.

Single plane
The Boeing 737 is a highly popular plane and has earned the title of the best-selling commercial airliner in history. Among the buyers of the Boeing 737 areSouthwest Airlines and WestJet Airlines , and for both airlines, the 737 makes up the vast majority of their fleets.

Southwest Airlines boosting fee to fly pets

(Photo: Southwest Airlines)
It'll soon cost more to bring your pet with you when you fly on Southwest Airlines. The airline is citing higher costs in raising its pet fee to $95 per flight from $75 beginning with flights on Jan. 15.

Glasgow Prestwick Airport sold to Scottish government for £1

February 2011: Scotland’s First Minister, Alex Salmond, and an unknown airline executive opened
Ryanair’s €10 million maintenance facility at Prestwick. Since then the independently-minded Scottish
Government has bought the airport: “The strategic and economic importance of Prestwick Airport
 is such that we weren’t prepared to see Prestwick close.
It was confirmed earlier this week that Glasgow Prestwick Airport had been sold by its New Zealand-based owners Infratil to the Scottish Government for the grand sum of just £1 (this follows the announced sale of Infratil’s other UK airport, Manston, also for £1, in October). 

Arik Air Adds A330 Service to Accra from Nov 2013

Arik Air since mid-November 2013 has introduced Airbus A330-200 aircraft operations on Lagos – Accraroute, operating 6 of 14 weekly flights.

W3071 LOS0720 – 0720ACC 73G x135
W3087 LOS0720 – 0720ACC 73G 135
W3075 LOS1700 – 1700ACC 332 x6
W3075 LOS1700 – 1700ACC 738 6

W3072 ACC0805 – 1005LOS 73G x135
W3088 ACC1335 – 1535LOS 73G 135
W3076 ACC1830 – 2030LOS 332 x6
W3076 ACC1830 – 2030LOS 738 6

Currently, Arik Air A330 schedule to Accra is updated on weekly basis, therefore flights on/after December 2013 that shows 737 operation may be switched to A330 at a later date. Planned A330 operation remains subject to change.

Source: Airline Route

Amaszonas launches its longest route so far to Asuncion



Amaszonas of Bolivia has added another international route to its network with the addition of thrice-weekly flights between Santa Cruz (VVI) and Asuncion (ASU) in Paraguay. 

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Low-cost airlines booming in Middle East

A new analytical report released by Amadeus air traffic system revealed that low-cost airlines, also known as "economic airlines" in the Middle East, show great confidence in their ability to grow, having seen an overall absorptive capacity increase from 11.5 million seats in the first half of 2012 to 13.5 million seats during the same period in 2013.

Alexander Gore, an economic airlines specialist at Amadeus, said: “We are seeing a boom in the capacity of low-cost airlines throughout Asia as the air travel sector is suffering from a big gap. However, the capacity across developed markets in Europe and North America is restricted.” Such factors, he explained, explain the desire of low-cost airlines to find new approaches to secure future growth.

Allegiant to operate twice-weekly seasonal flights between Portsmouth and Punta Gorda



Allegiant Air will add new seasonal, nonstop jet service between Portsmouth and Punta Gorda Airport beginning on February 12, 2014. The new flights will operate twice weekly between Portsmouth International Airport at Pease (PSM) and Punta Gorda Airport (PGD).

Airline pilot spots astronauts returning to Earth

Update after we confirmed the image below shows the Soyuz spacecraft returning to Earth Captain Wijker sent us this message:
Just reflecting on what I saw; watched like millions of others many times animated footage of space capsules returning to earth and this is almost routine and you can take this in without too much emotion. Now having seen this fire ball shooting across the sky knowing there are actually 3 people inside that fire ball that are back safe on earth 20 minutes later is breathtaking.
Very privileged that I was lucky enough to see this.
British Airways pilot Captain Simon Wijker caught this image of the Soyuz TMA-09M spacecraft, shortly before it landed in Kazakhstan. Inside the spacecraft were ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano, NASA’s Karen Nyberg, Russian commander Fyodor Yurchikhin and the Olympic torch.
Credit: Simon Wijker
Captain Wijker contacted ESA, thinking that this might have been ESA’s Earth-monitoring satellite GOCE that was predicted to fall back to Earth around the same time.

Africa Airline Association brings airlines to Kenya for General Assembly



The African Airline Association, in short AFRAA, which is based in Nairobi, Kenya, will this weekend start their annual general assembly and most member airlines are expected to attend, not just for the meetings in the conference room but also for the scenic setting along the famous Diani Beach south of Mombasa.

The Leisure Lodge Resort will be the main venue for the meetings, although participants are also accommodated at the nearby Leopard Beach Resort & Spa.

The organizers have prepared an extensive agenda for the meeting and in particular the confirmed panelists are promising to generated animated discussions with the audience. 

All eyes will be on Kenya Airways’ Dr. Titus Naikuni and his counterpart from Ethiopian Airlines Tewolde Mariam to hear what they will have to say while on the same panel discussing ‘How can African airlines regain leadership of African skies’, especially in the light of comments made earlier this year on the sidelines of the IATA meeting in South Africa, where Dr. Naikuni suggested that the key players in Africa, Kenya Airways, Ethiopian Airlines and South African Airways, come together and form an African airline cooperation, if not outright alliance, to create the critical mass needed to effectively compete with the giants from the Gulf and the European legacy carriers.

Boeing: 15 airlines warned over high-altitude ice


Boeing plans to raise production of the 787 Dreamliner to 12 per month by 2016
Fifteen airlines have been warned about the risk of ice forming on Boeing's new 747-8 and 787 Dreamliner planes. The issue - affecting some types of engines made by General Electric when planes fly near high-level thunderstorms - prompted Japan Airlines to cancel two international routes.

There have been six incidents since April when aircraft powered by GE engines lost power at high altitude.
These are the latest technical issues to hit the Dreamliner. They saw the entire fleet being grounded earlier this year following battery problems.

Ryanair's Better Customer Service Might Not Be Enough to Save Discount Airline


Ryanair Holdings , the Irish low-fares airline, regularly courts controversy and CEO Michael O'Leary often appears to revel in it. They may offer some of the lowest fares in Europe, but there's still a price to pay; notably high charges for baggage or a reprint of your boarding pass, uncomfortable seating, and poor customer service. 

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Kingfisher Finvest India further withdraws from Kingfisher Airlines


Kingfisher Airlines shareholder, Kingfisher Finvest India, has further reduced its stake in the defunct carrier by 16 million shares to just 0.29%. The sell-off is the second such transaction in two months following a INR230million (USD3.67million) trade which saw it reduce its previous 7.94% stake in Kingfisher by 4.94%.

Source: CH-Aviation

Venezuelan airline for inaugural flight tomorrow


Venezuela’s CONVIASA Airline will be operating a non-commercial inaugural flight into the Cheddi Jagan International Airport, Timehri tomorrow, to signal the beginning of their once weekly commercial flight on the Puerto Ordaz/Georgetown route.

United opens a new wide body maintenance hangar at Washington Dulles International Airport



United Airlines officially opened its new wide body aircraft maintenance hangar yesterday at Washington Dulles International Airport, a major United hub and the airline’s principal gateway to the Middle East.
United invested nearly $45 million to construct the facility, which will enable the airline to perform maintenance on two wide body or several narrow body aircraft simultaneously. United employs approximately 300 technical operations employees at Dulles, and has nearly 6,000 employees throughout the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.

UAE Special Ops Aircraft Come Out Of The Shadows

The Air Tractor AT-802i operated by the UAE Special Operations Command made its public debut
 at the Dubai Airshow. Also shown (inset) was a Cessna AC-208 Caravan armed with Hellfire missiles.
 (Photos: Chris Pocock)
This week’s Dubai Airshow was the first time that a UAE Air Tractor AT-802i has been shown in public. The UAE purchased 24 of these highly modified agricultural aircraft, and took delivery of the first in late 2010. Media reports suggest that six of the aircraft are being donated to Jordan but probably with armament capability removed.

Workforce wage disputes discouraging investors in Air Zimbabwe

Air Zimbabwe  is scaring potential foreign investors away with its legacy of unresolved employee salary disputes. During a Parliamentary Portfolio Inquest, Zimbabwe's NewsDay quotes Transport and Infrastructural Development ministry secretary Munesushe Munodawafa as saying investors had shown keen interest in the struggling national carrier: 

JetBlue now flies as far south as Lima, Peru (are Airbus A330s coming?)



JetBlue Airways is stretching its route map further south in Latin America suggesting the rumored Airbus A330s could be ordered in the future. Yesterday the fast-growing company began daily nonstop service from Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood to Lima, Peru. 

Bangkok Don Mueang Airport grows 35% in a year; ‘old’ airport turns into Bangkok’s new low-cost hub

Nok Air, Thailand’s domestic low-cost carrier, and Bangkok Don Mueang’s second-largest airline customer,
commenced operations on its first international route – to Yangon – earlier this month.
Considered to be one of the world’s oldest international airports, Bangkok Don Mueang was officially opened as a Royal Thai Air Force facility in March 1914; the first commercial service was inaugurated here by KLM as early as 1924. Following the opening of Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport, Don Mueang closed down for business and was only reopened in 2012 after years of renovation. 

Boliviana de Aviación to acquire four MA-60s for domestic operations


Boliviana de Aviación is set to acquire four MA-60s from Xian Aircraft Company with the first of the turboprops due for delivery in the early half of next year. 

Lawmakers Urge Bidding for Gates in Airline Merger


Four key members of Congress say that all airlines — not just low-fare carriers — should be able to bid on gates and landing rights that American Airlines and US Airways will give up after their merger.

The leaders of the House and Senate transportation committees say they're worried that unless the big airlines can bid, service between Washington and some smaller cities may be lost.

The lawmakers made their concerns public Friday as consumer advocates prepared to ask a federal judge to force the airlines into deeper concessions in exchange for approving a merger that will create the world's biggest airline.

Pakistani airline pilot was four times over the limit after drinking a BOTTLE of whisky ... but believed he was legal under 12-hour 'bottle to throttle' rule

An airline pilot has been jailed for nine months for being drunk in his cockpit before a flight.

The judge said it was 'astonishing' that foreign pilots flying out of UK airports were unaware of the law here and believed it was legal to fly if there was a 12 hour gap 'from bottle to throttle.'

Captain Irfan Faiz, 55, was more than four times the drink-fly limit when he was breathalysed after being spotted 'staggering' and 'not walking straight' on the way to the plane, a court heard. He was arrested and taken to a police station for questioning.
Wreckless: Irfan Faiz was arrested fter being spotted 'staggering' around the
 airport minutes before he was due to fly a plane

Get ready for Middle East airline domination



The record-smashing number of aircraft orders announced this week at the Dubai Air Show by the big three Persian Gulf airlines could spell big trouble for the U.S. airline industry. The 355 wide-body jets ordered by Emirates, Qatar Airways, and Etihad to the tune of some $160 billion, arms the Gulf carriers with a huge fleet of aircraft, crushing their U.S. and European counterparts in terms of efficiency, comfort, and luxury.

Ryanair to add 12 new routes from the London Stansted hub


Ryanair announced it will open 12 new routes from London Stansted in April 2014 as well as adding frequencies on 17 existing routes, which will deliver an additional 1,300,000 passengers per year.

Friday, November 22, 2013

SpiceJet ‘networth a negative Rs 630 cr’, airline in urgent need of funds

Mounting losses and an unstable cost environment could make further funding of SpiceJet’s operations difficult. The airline seems to have improved its domestic performance in October over peers, leaving Air India behind to claim the second slot in market share and yields will surely have improved too over the second quarter because of price hikes announced in September by all domestic airlines. 

Dassault Falcon 5X Performs First Virtual Flight

Subassemblies of the first Falcon 5X prototype, such as this upper nose section, are taking shape at
Dassault’s factory in Argenteuil, near Paris. The company expects to fly the prototype i
n the first quarter of 2015. (Photo: Dassault Falcon)
Dassault pilots performed the first “simulated flight” of the Falcon 5X on November 13, providing insight into how the business jet will behave in flight. The Falcon “simulation bench” is closer to a flight simulator than an iron bird, according to Dassault.

It consists of a cockpit mock-up coupled to a simulator and panoramic visual system. The device is designed to help fine-tune and validate control laws before the actual airplane flies.

British Airways calls for more female applicants for pilot training programme

Sisters Cliodhna Duggan (35) and Aoife Duggan (27) from Dublin, are both British Airways pilots.
British Airways’ cadet training programme is in its third successful year and with just a week to go until applications close, the airline is appealing for more female applicants.

The airline’s Future Pilot Programme, an 18-month pilot training course, has proved extremely popular and has attracted around 5,000 applicants for less than one hundred places in its first two years.

Tata SIA Airlines Ltd gets FIPB greenlight


Singapore Airlines and Tata Group have been given the greenlight from the Indian Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) over their proposed INR3.05billion (USD48.74million) new joint venture, TATA SIA Airlines Ltd.

The approval is only the first in a long gauntlet of bureaucratic checks that all major local/foreign ventures must undergo before seeing the light of day.

Source: CH-Aviation

SKorea deploys airline tax in AIDS, TB, malaria battle

South Korea's Korean Air planes and foreign airplanes sit on the tarmac at Incheon international airport,
west of Seoul, on May 2, 2012.South Korea's Korean Air planes and foreign airplanes sit on the tarmac
at Incheon international airport, west of Seoul, on May 2, 2012
The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria announced Thursday that it had received a major boost from South Korea thanks to a levy on airline tickets.

The Geneva-based body, which is backed by governments and private donors such as Microsoft founder Bill Gates, said South Korea was to double its contribution over the next three years.

Afriqiyah Airways rebrands, retiring the 9.9.99 tail logo


Afriqiyah Airways rebranded the company in October with this new aircraft livery and logo (see above). With the new political situation in Libya, a new livery was inevitable. 

Pakistan Airlines steward charged after 2.5kgs of heroin seized at Leeds Bradford Airport




AN air steward has been charged after 2.5kgs of heroin was found inside baggage at Leeds Bradford International Airport.

Syed Shahrukh Shah, 31, was arrested by UK Border Force officials and has been charged with attempting to smuggle the class A drugs into the UK after arriving on a Pakistan International Airlines flight from Islamabad last night.

After the low-cost airline, the poorer man’s recon private jet

The Dubai Airshow produced a harvest of deals for the world's biggest and flashiest jets this week, but for those unable to afford a US$400-million (RM1.2 billion) A380 superjumbo there is always an alternative - the poor man's private jet.

Lufthansa, Austrian suspend Tripoli flights over civil disturbances

Lufthansa and Austrian Airlines are suspending their Tripoli Int'l, Libya flights until 25 November citing the current unstable socio-political situation in the North African country. 

Tunisair has also scaled back its operations dropping its Tunis to Tripoli service from four to three daily flights. The Libyan capital has been paralysed by the presence of numerous Islamist militias that had set up base there.

Source: CH-Aviation

Non-stop American Airlines flights from West Palm Beach (PBIA) to Los Angeles (LAX) begin

Non-stop flights from West Palm Beach to Los Angeles started on Thursday. American Airlines launched its inaugural flight from LAX to PBIA. Passengers who took the red-eye flight to West Palm Beach were greeted with balloons, food and music.

Palm Beach County tourism officials have been trying to get this route scheduled for more than a year. News Channel 5 spoke with passengers headed to Los Angeles who said they're excited about the new direct flight and plan on using it more in the future.

Ethiopian to double its Q400 fleet to twenty-six come 2025

Ethiopian Airlines will double its fleet of Dash 8-400s from thirteen to at least twenty-six come 2025. Four of the new aircraft will be sourced from Dubai-based lessor Palma Holding Ltd. 

Airline confirms closure, impact


NADI-BASED workers of Australian airline, Qantas, will not be affected by the closure of its retail travel centre in Fiji next month.

A Qantas spokeswoman told this newspaper the airline employed nine workers in Fiji — six in Suva and three in Nadi. "The Nadi-based employees are unaffected by the changes. However, all six Suva-based employees have been offered employment with Tappoo Group of Companies."

The airline said it was no longer commercially viable for Qantas to have its own retail presence in Fiji and would subsequently close its retail travel centre as a result next month.

Dassault To Deliver First India-based Falcon 2000S

Dassault is preparing to deliver the first Falcon 2000S to be based in India next month, following certification by India’s aviation authority on November 1. The new twinjet will be based in Bangalore. To date, Dassault has handed over 10 Falcon 2000Ss since deliveries started in April. 

The aircraft has already been certified in the U.S., European Union, Brazil, Mexico and Turkey, and Dassault expects approval from the Canadian authorities “shortly.” The 2000S also recently received EASA and FAA steep-approach approval, paving the way for its operation at London City Airport.

Source: AINOnline

Somalia Airlines Back in Action

The federal government of Somalia has confirmed that the long awaited Somalia airlines will resume in the next coming days.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Thai board balks at Saudi prince's offer for parked A340-500

Thai Airways International Management has resolved not to sell one of their four decommissioned A340-500s to British firm, AvCon Worldwide, despite them having already put down a deposit of USD2.5million. 

AvCon represents the interests of Saudi Arabia's Prince Faisal al-Saud. The Bangkok Post reports that Thai authorities had forewarned that AvCon's proposed acquisition price of USD23.5million was too low and are now considering possibilities to make use of the planes and will propose the finding to the airline's board by next month. 

Jobs alert: 500,000 pilots wanted… Emirates, flydubai, Etihad, Qatar Airways

The Mideast aviation sector will imminently face a manpower shortage say experts, as 450,000 jobs open up with Emirates, Etihad Airways, flydubai and Qatar Airways spearheading an aggressive expansion drive as the order book at the Dubai Airshow crosses $196 billion.

The Gulf Aviation Training Event (GATE), running on the sidelines of the Dubai Airshow’s, began at Dubai World Central under the theme ‘Breaking Paradigms: Training the Gulf’s New Generation of Aviators’ and quickly heard how crisis loomed over the sector.