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Shaheen Air

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shaheen Air International
IATA ICAO Call sign
NL SAI SHAHEEN AIR
Founded1993
Commenced operations25 October 1994[citation needed]
Ceased operations08 October 2018
HubsJinnah International Airport
Fleet size0
Destinations0
HeadquartersKarachi, Pakistan
Websiteshaheenair.com (archives)

Shaheen Air International (Urdu: شاہین ایئر) was a private Pakistani airline with its head office at Jinnah International Airport in Karachi and was founded by the Shah family. It remained Pakistan's second-largest airline until its liquidation in 2018 due to financial troubles. The airline owed Rs. 1.36 billion to Civil Aviation Authority of Pakistan (CAA) and its employees salaries.[1]

It provided passenger, cargo and charter services, to major cities in Pakistan and the Middle East. It suspended all operations in October 2018.

History

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A former Shaheen Air Boeing 737-200.

Shaheen Air International was founded in 1993 by Shaheen Foundation.[2] Shaheen Air Cargo was a division of Shaheen Air International that was established in 1993, soon after the inception of the airline. Shaheen Air provided special services for sending small time-sensitive consignments.[3] The airline's early operations were fraught with difficulties, exacerbated by a 50 percent fare discount for retired and serving military officers and high operating costs due to a limited number of aircraft on wet lease.[2]

The airline faced financial challenges, losing Rs 60 million between December 1999 and May 2000, in addition to owing Rs 70 million to the Civil Aviation Authority of Pakistan for services during the same period.[2]

On 22 May 2004, the Civil Aviation Authority of Pakistan (CAA) grounded Shaheen Air as the airline owed it millions of rupees. Three days later the airline was cleared by the CAA to resume its domestic and international operations. The clearance letter was issued by CAA following receipt of a payment from Shaheen Air International towards the outstanding dues and funds. The same year, Shaheen Air International (SAI) became Shaheen Air and the airline introduced a new livery and corporate website.

Shaheen Air started its own maintenance repair organization (MRO) by the name of Shaheen Engineering and Aircraft Maintenance Services (SEAMS) to provide maintenance services to Shaheen Air as well as other regional and international airlines.

In its international operations, Shaheen Air operated between Pakistan and numerous destinations in the Middle East. Shaheen Air once started flight operations to Riyadh with three different routes from Pakistan.[4]

Shaheen Air was Pakistan's second-largest airline next to the flag carrier, Pakistan International Airlines but due to the downturn in 2018, the airline declined. The airline was declared a defaulter by PCAA and FBR.[5] In October 2018, SAI flight operations were completely suspended by the local regularity body PCAA and the airline declared a financial defaulter. Since November 2018, all SAI offices have closed.[6]

Investor Rumor and Liquidation

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Shaheen reported an un-named investor from Saudi Arabia was to help the airline return to service from January 2019.[7]

Even after repeated protests by the 5,000 employees, who were still owed months of wages, as of February 2019 no investigation into the matter had been initiated by any of the agencies, including the Federal Board of Revenue, Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority and the Federal Ministry of Aviation.[8]

Destinations

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Shaheen Air operated the following services as of July 2018.[9] All of their routes were suspended in October 2018.[10] In January 2019, they announced they would not resume business.

Country City Airport Notes
 China Guangzhou Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport Terminated[11]
 Iran Mashhad Mashhad International Airport Terminated
 Kuwait Kuwait City Kuwait International Airport Terminated
 Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur International Airport Terminated[12]
 Oman Muscat Muscat International Airport Terminated
 Pakistan Dera Ghazi Khan Dera Ghazi Khan International Airport Terminated
Faisalabad Faisalabad International Airport Terminated
Islamabad Islamabad International Airport Terminated
Karachi Jinnah International Airport Terminated
Lahore Allama Iqbal International Airport Terminated
Multan Multan International Airport Terminated
Peshawar Bacha Khan International Airport Terminated
Quetta Quetta International Airport Terminated
Rahim Yar Khan Shaikh Zayed International Airport Terminated
Sialkot Sialkot International Airport Terminated
Sukkur Sukkur Airport Terminated
 Qatar Doha Doha International Airport Terminated
 Saudi Arabia Dammam King Fahad International Airport Terminated
Jeddah King Abdulaziz International Airport Terminated
Medina Prince Mohammad Bin Abdulaziz Airport Terminated
Riyadh King Khalid International Airport Terminated
 United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi Abu Dhabi International Airport Terminated
Al Ain Al Ain International Airport Terminated
Dubai Dubai International Airport Terminated
Sharjah Sharjah International Airport Terminated
 United Kingdom Leeds/Bradford Leeds Bradford Airport Terminated
Manchester Manchester Airport Terminated[13]


Fleet

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Shaheen Air Airbus A330-200
A Shaheen Air International Tupolev Tu-154M taxiing at Dubai International Airport, United Arab Emirates in 1999.
Shaheen Air Airbus A320-200

Two Airbus A320-200 remain in storage.[14] The rest of the aircraft were leased and were returned to the lessors after the airline ceased operations.[15] Pakistani law requires a passenger airline to have a minimum of three aircraft in its fleet, and Shaheen's fleet of two stored aircraft does not fulfil the mandatory requirement of the license to operate. Many of the old derelict planes of Shaheen Air are abandoned at Jinnah International Airport. On 26 January 2020, one of these planes, a Boeing 737-200, registered as AP-BIS, was destroyed by fire.[16]

Former fleet

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Accidents and incidents

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  • 22 April 2012 - the main landing gear of a Boeing 737-400 operating as Flight 122 from Islamabad to Karachi collapsed during its landing at Karachi. No injuries were reported among the 122 passengers and 6 crew on board.[17]
  • 24 September 2015 - a Boeing 737-400 registered AP-BJR and operating as Flight 791 took off from a taxiway instead of the runway while departing from Sharjah. The aircraft was undamaged in the incident.[18]
  • 23 November 2015 - A Boeing 737-400 registration AP-BJO, operating as Flight 142, collapsed during a botched and mishandled landing. There were 112 passengers and 7 crew members on board; 10 passengers were injured. The cause of the accident was due to the captain being intoxicated and under the influence of alcohol.[19]
  • 26 January 2020 - a Boeing 737-200 registration AP-BIS, was destroyed by fire, the incident occurred at Karachi Jinnah International Airport, Pakistan.[20]

References

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  1. ^ Tahir, Zulqernain (7 December 2018). "Owners of Shaheen Air International flee abroad". DAWN.COM.
  2. ^ a b c Brömmelhörster, Jörn; Paes, Wolf-Christian (2004). The Military as an Economic Actor: Soldiers in Business. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 138-139. ISBN 9780333999288. From a financial standpoint, the biggest project is the Shaheen International Airline (SAI). However, the venture was mismanaged due to the highly bureaucratic policies of the Shaheen Foundation's management. As a result SAI lost about Rs 60 million from December 1999 to May 2000 alone. This was in addition to the Rs 70 million it owed to the Civil Aviation Authority for the services provided during this period. The situation in the initial days of the airline's operations was even worse. Some sources attributed this to the mismanagement of the 50 per cent fare discount offered to retired and serving military officers. The fact that the aircraft, which were on 'wet' lease, were limited in number added continuously to the company's operating costs.
  3. ^ Shaheen Air Cargo services accessed 2009-12-31
  4. ^ "Shaheen Air flights for Riyadh - Anna Aero" Shaheen Air inaugurates operations in Riyadh with three routes from Pakistan
  5. ^ Cheung, Tai Ming; Tai, Ming Cheung (1 September 2018). China's Entrepreneurial Army. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199246908 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ "Shaheen Air's operations have been stopped because it can't pay its debts - Samaa Digital". Samaa TV. October 2018.
  7. ^ Report, Monitoring (26 October 2018). "Shaheen Air aiming to restart operations by January: Report".
  8. ^ Driessche, Maarten Van Den (13 February 2019). "Shaheen Air International officially announced its closure".
  9. ^ Shaheen Air schedule
  10. ^ "Shaheen Air's operations have been stopped because it can't pay its debts | SAMAA". October 2018.
  11. ^ https://www.shaheenair.com/index.php?r=info/routemap [bare URL]
  12. ^ Shaheen suspends Kuala Lumpur
  13. ^ "Shaheen Air ends Manchester service in mid Feb 2017". Airlineroute. 3 February 2017. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  14. ^ "Shaheen Air Fleet Details and History". www.planespotters.net. Retrieved 2019-11-17.
  15. ^ "Last plane of Shaheen Air International leaves Pakistan". Pakistan Aviation. 2018-10-07. Retrieved 2019-11-17.
  16. ^ "Boeing 737-200 of defunct Shaheen Air set on fire at Karachi Airport, Pakistan". 27 January 2020.
  17. ^ "Accident: Shaheen B734 at Karachi on Apr 22nd 2012, left main gear collapse on landing". avherald.com.
  18. ^ "Report: Shaheen B734 at Sharjah on Sep 24th 2015, took off from taxiway". avherald.com.
  19. ^ "Accident: Shaheen B734 at Lahore on Nov 3rd 2015, runway excursion, both main gear collapsed". avherald.com.
  20. ^ "Accident: Shaheen Boeing 737-200 at Karachi on 26 Jan 2020, destroyed by fire".[permanent dead link]
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Media related to Shaheen Air at Wikimedia Commons