Sunday, October 28, 2012

Jeddah as a connecting point

Definitely, Jeddah is not a good connecting point between Cairo (CAI) and Johannesburg (JNB). Moreover, in case of using multiple tickets for connecting flights, there will be a risk of potential problems in case of late arrival of the delivering carrier.
Simply, two separate tickets mean two carriage contracts. On the other hand, the participating carriers shown on ONE ticket covering all flights from the origin (CAI) to the destination (JNB) will be responsible for any possible delay, misconnection, or layover.
What about flying with Kenya Airways through Nairobi, or with Ethiopian through Addis Ababa?

Date: 04 June 2010 commenting on http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Egypt former presidential candidate referred to court

Referring Mr. Shafik and his entourage to the criminal court was quite anticipated. However, the timing of referring them is the issue. The allegations against Mr. Shafik emerged long time ago and they have been in circulation ever since.
Are we supposed to believe that the case has been politically motivated?

The real question mark is about Mr. Tawfik Assi who has just been appointed as the Chairman of EgyptAir Holding Company. Did the new Minister of Civil Aviation make his homework before appointing Mr. Assi in his current position on the 26th of September 2012?

Date: 07 October 2012 commenting on http://www.bloomberg.com/

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Egypt: Prime Minister inspects Cairo Airport

It is quite absurd that he was assured that passengers receive good treatment. Isn’t it supposed to be like that without saying?
Is the Prime Minister qualified enough to inspect the service quality at the airport? Consequently, hailing the efforts exerted by airport employees is highly questionable.

Date: 29 September 2012 commenting on http://allafrica.com/

Friday, August 31, 2012

Body found in landing gear of British Airways 747 jet at Heathrow

This is a non-traditional example of non-revenue go-show passengers.
The only difference is that the passenger managed to avoid all airport formalities, especially the security checkpoints.
The whole story represents a highly serious act in airline security. That man could have been a serious threat to the security of both aircraft and passengers.

Date: 31 August 2012 commenting on http://airnation.net/

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Ryanair to remove bathrooms & add more seats

The pursuit of Ryanair for finding new ways to squeeze more passengers inside its planes will never end. The airline's last move to reduce the number of lavatories on board came as no surprise to anyone observing Ryanair.
Would it be too bizarre for Ryanair to think of accommodating air passengers inside the cargo hold of the aircraft?
One of my blog posts was about the same mentality of Ryanair. It is located here (http://airlinologist.blogspot.com/2009/07/ryanairs-step-too-far_12.html).

Date: 14 October 2011 commenting on http://www.inquisitr.com/

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Air Nigeria takes delivery of A330-200 aircraft

Generally speaking, making its non-fully utilized fleet available for lease is an advantage for EgyptAir. That advantage will be maximized in case of wet lease as the airline would be able to utilize its surplus of crewmembers as well.

For Air Nigeria, the case is not necessarily the same. It is true that the airline would satisfy its short-term operational needs. However, leasing specifically from EgyptAir is a separate issue and has two strong points of concern. They are language and quality of service.

Unfortunately, EgyptAir cabin crewmembers speak the Egyptian dialect of Arabic language plus limited, if any, English language. That issue would have its negative impact on the communication quality between the cabin crew and the passengers of Air Nigeria and consequently the service quality. Putting the language aside, did Air Nigeria carefully check the level of customer-centricity of EgyptAir cabin crew before signing the ACMI lease?

To be on the safe side, Air Nigeria is advised to use its own crewmembers side by side with EgyptAir crewmembers for the sake of improving issues of both language and quality. Alternatively, damp lease, rather than wet lease, would resolve the previously-mentioned issues.

Date: 17 May 2012 commenting on http://leadership.ng/nga/