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Ariana Afghan Airlines

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Ariana Afghan Airlines
File:Ariana Afghan Airlines logo.png
IATA ICAO Callsign
FG AFG ARIANA
Founded1955
HubsKabul International Airport
Fleet size9 (+4 orders)
Destinations20
HeadquartersKabul, Afghanistan
WebsiteAfghanistan: http://www.flyariana.com/
Europe: http://www.flyariana.eu

Ariana Afghan Airlines Co. Ltd. is the oldest and the national airline of Afghanistan, and is currently the largest Afghan airline, based in Kabul. The airline operates domestic and international passenger services.

It is wholly-owned by the Afghan government, with its main base in Kabul International Airport.[1]

The airline is on the List of air carriers banned in the European Union, with the exception of one plane registered in France; a leased Airbus A310 which maintains a service to Germany.

History

Ariana Afghan Airlines aircraft at Kabul Airport.
Ariana Afghan Airlines A310 F-GEMO landing in Frankfurt, Germany.

Ariana Afghan Airlines was established on January 27, 1955. During the 1970s, Ariana was considered a top notch airline company by many travel experts.[citation needed] At that time, the airline operated aircraft such as the Douglas DC-10s and Boeing 727s. Ariana was owned 49% by Pan Am and 51% by the Afghan government.

After the withdrawal of the Soviet Union in 1989 and collapse of former president Najibulla's communist government, the Taliban took over Kabul in 1996. Afghanistan faced substantial economic sanctions from the international sector during the Taliban regime. The sanctions, along with the Taliban government's control of the company and the grounding of many of the carrier's international flights, had a devastating effect on the economic health of the company through the 1990s. The fleet was reduced to only a handful of Russian and Ukrainian built An-26s, Yakovlev Yak-40s and three Boeing 727s, which were used on the longest domestic routes. In October 1996, Pakistan provided a temporary maintenance and operational base at Karachi. By 1999, Ariana flew only to Dubai, United Arab Emirates and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; also, limited cargo flights continued into China's western provinces. However, sanctions imposed by UN Security Council Resolution 1267 forced the airline company to suspend overseas operations. In November 2001, the airline was grounded completely.

Following the removal of the Taliban by NATO and Afghan Northern Alliance forces in the wake of the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks, Ariana began to rebuild its operations in December 2001. About a month later, the UN sanctions were finally lifted, permitting the airline to fly again. As a gesture of good-will and a step towards developing foreign relations with Afghanistan, the government of India gave the state carrier three ex-Air India Airbus A300s. Ariana resumed flights to international destinations, and its first international passenger flight since 1999 landed at Indira Gandhi International Airport in New Delhi, India.

Destinations

Fleet

The Ariana Afghan Airlines fleet includes the following aircraft (as at June 2009):

Ariana Afghan Airlines Fleet
Aircraft In Service Orders Routes Notes
Airbus A300B4-200 1 Medium haul
Airbus A310-300 2 2 Medium-Long haul operated by Saga Airlines,
orders due in July [1]
Antonov An-24 1 Domestic and regional flights
Boeing 727-200 5 Short - Medium haul 1 is operated for govt.
Boeing 727-200F 1 Short - Medium cargo haul
Boeing 737-700 4 Delivery from 2009 [2],
order possibly cancelled

Former fleet

Ariana fleet was composed of Boeing 707-320, Boeing 720B, Boeing 727-100C, McDonnell Douglas DC-10, Tupolev Tu-134 and Tupolev Tu-154 from 1970s to 1990s.

Incidents and Accidents

Robert Young Pelton of National Geographic stated in an article that people nicknamed the airline Scariana due to a perceived poor safety record.[3]

  • In 1959 an Ariana Douglas DC-4 crashed in Beirut soon after take off due to a fire onboard, 24 out of 27 people were killed in the aircraft .
  • In 1969, a Boeing 727 arriving at London Gatwick Airport from Frankfurt International Airport crashed into a house, killing 50 of the 66 persons aboard. The pilot attempted to land in dense fog, despite being advised to divert to London Heathrow. A married couple living at the house also died. Miraculously, their baby survived.
  • In 1984, A McDonnell Douglas DC-10 descending to Kabul International Airport from Kandahar at 14,000 feet above sea level, 12 miles away from the airport was hit by a rocket in engine number 1. 300 passengers were aboard with no fatalities reported.
  • In 1985, an Antonov An-26 of Ariana was shot down by rebels near Kandahar, killing all 47 passengers and 5 crew.
  • In 1989, a door opened aboard an Antonov An-24 in the middle of a flight from Kabul to Zaranj, and six people were killed when the plane crashed into a hill.
  • In 1992, a Tupolev 154M, carrying the then president of Afghanistan Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, was hit by an RPG as it was on approach to land at Kabul Airport. The plane landed safely, with no fatalities.[4] [5]
  • In 1995, another An-26 crashed, after running out of fuel at Jalalabad, three passengers died.
  • In 1997, another crash occurred in Jalalabad when a Yakovlev Yak-40 crashed while landing, resulting in two fatalities.
  • In January 1998 an Antonov An-12 crashed near Khojak Pass, Pakistan after running out of fuel killing all 51 people onboard.
  • In March 1998, a 727 from Sharjah via Kandahar to Kabul crashed after hitting a mountain while heading to Kabul Airport, resulting in the loss of all 45 on board.
  • In February 2000, to escape a Taliban death squad, nine men, led by brothers Ali Safi and Mohammed Safi, hijacked a Boeing 727 containing more than 180 people. The plane was diverted through Tashkent and Moscow before landing at Stansted Airport north of London, where the hijacking ended four days later with a peaceful surrender. The men were convicted in December 2001 of hijacking, false imprisonment and weapons offenses. They each served sentences of between 27 and 30 months, and have since been granted asylum in the UK. It was later found that the hijacking was a drama orchestrated jointly by the hijackers, their families and other passengers in hope of getting asylum.[6]
  • In October 2001 bombing by United States forces on Kabul Airport destroyed two Boeing 727-100C, two Antonov An-12, and three An-24.
  • In March 2007, an Ariana Airbus A300B4 from Kabul via Ankara, landed at Atatürk International Airport, Istanbul. It overran the runway and came to a halt resting on its right wing. The weather was poor with rain and gusting winds. The aircraft is being dismantled.[7]

Banned in the EU

The entire Ariana Afghan Airlines fleet is on the list of air carriers banned in the EU (as of Nov 08). The rationale for the decision by the European Commission was the following (paraphrased):

  • During ramp inspections performed by German authorities under the SAFA programme evidence of serious safety deficiencies on the part of Ariana Afghan Airlines with regard to a certain aircraft on its fleet came to light (SAFA inspections No LBA-D-2004-269, LBA-D-2004-341, LBA-D-2004-374 and LBA-D-2004-597).
  • Ariana Afghan Airlines has demonstrated a lack of ability to address the safety deficiencies raised.
  • The air carrier in question, Ariana Afghan Airlines, did not respond in an adequate and timely manner to an enquiry by the civil aviation authority of Germany regarding the safety aspects of its operations. This demonstrates a lack of communication.
  • The regulatory authorities of Afghanistan, which have the responsibility for regulatory oversight of Ariana Afghan Airlines, have not exercised an adequate oversight over the aircraft used by this carrier in accordance with the obligations imposed on them under the Chicago Convention.
  • Therefore and on the basis of the common criteria[8] the Commission assessed that Ariana Afghan Airlines did not meet the common criteria and therefore should be banned from operating aircraft within the airspace of the Member States of the European Union. There is one exception: an Airbus A310 with registration number F-GYYY is registered in France and therefore subject to the oversight of the French authorities.[9]

Ariana maintains service to Germany as it is using a leased A310.

Official website
Other websites

References

  1. ^ "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-03-27. p. 77.
  2. ^ Boeing order
  3. ^ "Just the Ticket." National Geographic. Retrieved on 17 February 2009.
  4. ^ Aviation Safety Net
  5. ^ Human Rights Watch report
  6. ^ Hijacking in 2000
  7. ^ "Ariana A300 overruns while landing at Istanbul Ataturk". Flight International. 2007-04-03. p. 10.
  8. ^ Fly Well portal (Which contains links to the common air transport policy) Template:En icon, European Commission, March 22, 2006
  9. ^ Commission Regulation (EC) No 474/2006 of 22 March 2006 (PDF-file) Template:En icon, European Commission, March 22, 2006