Kuwait Airways

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Kuwait Airways
IATA
KU
ICAO
KAC
Callsign
KUWAITI
Founded 1954
Hubs Kuwait International Airport
Frequent flyer program Oasis Club
Member lounge Oasis Club
Fleet size 18
Destinations 42
Headquarters Kuwait City, Kuwait
Key people Shiekh Talal Mubarak Abdullah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah (CEO)
Website: http://www.kuwait-airways.com

Kuwait Airways (Arabic: الخطوط الجوية الكويتية) is the national airline of Kuwait, based in Kuwait City and wholly owned by the Kuwaiti Government. It operates scheduled international services throughout the Middle East, to Europe, the Far East and North America. Its main base is Kuwait International Airport.[1] Kuwait Airways is a member of the Arab Air Carriers Organization.

Contents

[citation needed]

The airline was conceived in February 1953 by two Kuwaiti businessmen and was established in March 1954. It started operations on 16 March 1954 as Kuwait National Airways. The current name was established in 1958, and that year saw a modernization of the fleet. In the 1970s, the airline further expanded its routes to include flights within the Middle East.

The airline was heavily affected by the Gulf War with many planes having to leave due to the invasion. During the occupation, operations were transferred to Bahrain. The carrier, however, flew a free Kuwait Airways service on the Bombay-Bahrain-Cairo-London route in a modified livery with a Boeing 727. Bahrain served as operational headquarters during the occupation. The aftermath of the war saw a change in composition of fleet. In 2005, Kuwait Airways signed an agreement with Sabre Airline Solutions giving Kuwait Airways full access to a modernized planning and crew optimizing portfolio.

Kuwait Airways was the first airline created by an Arab state in the Persian Gulf and competes with neighboring airlines such as Qatar Airways and Emirates.

The airline has 3,735 employees (at March 2007).[1]

In October 2007 the new CEO pledged that the airline should be privatised in order for it to compete efficiently against other airlines. He says that it will be hard for the airline to advance, especially in fleet renewal, without the privatisation.[2]

  • During the Iran-Iraq War, Kuwait Airways was the target of two hijackings. [3] The first was in 1984, when two Lebanese Shi'a gunmen diverted a flight to Tehran. The stand-off took six days but finally Iranian security officers dressed as staff overpowered the hijackers.
  • In 1988 a Kuwait Airways Boeing was hijacked and diverted to Algiers while on its way to Kuwait from Bangkok. The hijacking lasted 16 days and ended with a Kuwaiti Fireman person being killed along with another Kuwaiti military person. The Algerian authorities allowed the hijackers to escape in exchange for the remainder of the 110 people aboard to be set free.[citation needed]

see full article: Kuwait Airways destinations.

The Kuwait Airways fleet includes the following aircraft (as of May 2007):[citation needed]

As of 18 June 2007, ALAFCO has confirmed to buy 7 Airbus A320 and 12 Boeing 787-800. They will be leased to Kuwait Airways. In addition, the carrier also announced that it will purchase 2 Boeing 747-400 from Air India. These aircraft are 12 year old planes. Air India may also give Kuwait Airways 3 Airbus A310-300, which are 18 to 20 years old, as the former is replacing most of its Airbus fleet with a new Boeing fleet. Kuwait Airways also wants to be given Biman Bangladesh's old DC-10 and Fokker F-28 fleet in 2018 for 'free'. Biman's Fokker's are third hand and old while its DC-10s are worse.[4] [5]

This order later fell through as the Kuwaiti Government refused to the approve the renewal. The new CEO says that he does not expect a renewal to occur until the airline is privatised.[6]

  1. ^ a b "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International, 2007-04-03, p. 103. 
  2. ^ Airline need privatisation to advance Flight Global, 31/10/07
  3. ^ BBC News
  4. ^ Airbus
  5. ^ Flight Global
  6. ^ "Kuwait Airways may defer fleet decision until after privatisation" Flight Global, 31/10/07

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