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[[File:Air Paradise International Airbus A310 Hutchison.jpg|thumb|[[Airbus A310-300]] at [[Sydney Airport]] in 2004.]]
[[File:Air Paradise International Airbus A310 Hutchison.jpg|thumb|[[Airbus A310-300]] at [[Sydney Airport]] in 2004.]]
[[File:Air Paradise International Airbus A300 Hutchison.jpg|thumb|[[Airbus A300]] at [[Sydney Airport]] in 2003.]]
[[File:Air Paradise International Airbus A300 Hutchison.jpg|thumb|[[Airbus A300]] at [[Sydney Airport]] in 2003.]]
'''Air Paradise International''' was an [[airline]] based in [[Denpasar]], [[Bali]], [[Indonesia]]. It operated services to destinations in [[Australia]], [[South Korea]] and [[Taiwan]]. Its main base was [[Ngurah Rai Airport]], Denpasar. On 24 November 2005 the airline announced that it was ceasing operations due to a downturn in traffic following [[2005 Bali bombings|terrorist bombings]] on the Island on 1 October 2005. In February 2007 the Indonesian Transportation Ministry delayed licence revocation of 11 idle airlines, including Air Paradise, to give restructuring opportunities to the operators. Air Paradise was considering re-launching services in March 2007.<ref>[http://www.angkasa-online.com/public/print/17/6/138.htm Angkasa] March 2007</ref><ref>[http://www.balidiscovery.com/messages/message.asp?Id=3507 Bali News: Bali's Air Paradise to Fly Again in March 2007<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
'''Air Paradise International''' was an [[airline]] based in [[Denpasar]], [[Bali]], [[Indonesia]]. It operated services to destinations in [[Australia]], [[South Korea]] and [[Taiwan]]. Its main base was [[Ngurah Rai Airport]], Denpasar. On 24 November 2005 the airline announced that it was ceasing operations due to a downturn in traffic following [[2005 Bali bombings|terrorist bombings]] on the Island on 1 October 2005. In February 2007 the Indonesian Transportation Ministry delayed licence revocation of 11 idle airlines, including Air Paradise, to give restructuring opportunities to the operators. Air Paradise was considering re-launching services in March 2007.<ref>[http://www.angkasa-online.com/public/print/17/6/138.htm Angkasa] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080929000000/http://www.angkasa-online.com/public/print/17/6/138.htm |date=2008-09-29 }} March 2007</ref><ref>[http://www.balidiscovery.com/messages/message.asp?Id=3507 Bali News: Bali's Air Paradise to Fly Again in March 2007<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


== History ==
== History ==

Revision as of 18:07, 28 June 2017

Air Paradise International
IATA ICAO Callsign
AD PRZ RADISAIR
Founded2002
Ceased operations2005
HubsNgurah Rai International Airport
Focus citiesSydney, Seoul,Tokyo.
Frequent-flyer programParadise Birds
Fleet size3
Destinations7
HeadquartersDenpasar
Airbus A310-300 at Sydney Airport in 2004.
Airbus A300 at Sydney Airport in 2003.

Air Paradise International was an airline based in Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia. It operated services to destinations in Australia, South Korea and Taiwan. Its main base was Ngurah Rai Airport, Denpasar. On 24 November 2005 the airline announced that it was ceasing operations due to a downturn in traffic following terrorist bombings on the Island on 1 October 2005. In February 2007 the Indonesian Transportation Ministry delayed licence revocation of 11 idle airlines, including Air Paradise, to give restructuring opportunities to the operators. Air Paradise was considering re-launching services in March 2007.[1][2]

History

The airline was established in June 2002 and started operations on 16 February 2003 with services to Perth in Australia from Denpasar, Bali. On 27 December 2004 services began to Osaka, Japan. Services were suspended on 24 November 2005 following a downturn if traffic after the 1 October 2005 terrorist attacks in Bali. In June 2006, the website was still available, announcing negotiations to recapitalize the airline. Air Paradise was using A300's and A310's on flights to Melbourne, Sydney and Perth mostly for tourists. A major competitor on the Denpasar route was Garuda Indonesia.

Services

Air Paradise operated services to the following international scheduled destinations in January 2005: Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Osaka, Perth, Seoul and Sydney.

Fleet

The Air Paradise fleet comprised the following aircraft (at July 2005):

References

Media related to Air Paradise International at Wikimedia Commons