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Saudi Arabian Airlines

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Saudi Arabian Airlines (Arabic: الخطوط الجوية العربية السعودية) is the national airline of Saudi Arabia, based in Jeddah. It operates domestic and international scheduled flights to over 70 destinations in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Europe and North America. It also operates domestic and international charter flights. Its main base is King Abdulaziz International Airport, (JED), Jeddah, with hubs at King Khalid International Airport (RUH), Riyadh and Dhahran International Airport (DHA). The Dhahran International Airport is now closed for passenger traffic and is now used only as a military base. However in December 1999, a new civil airport called King Fahd International Airport became operational at Dammam (DMM).

Saudi Arabian Airlines is a member of the Arab Air Carriers Organization.

History

The airline was founded as Saudi Arabian Airlines in 1945 with the gift of a Douglas DC-3 presented to King Abdul Aziz by the US President Roosevelt and began operations with a service between Jeddah and Dhahran. The first international route to Damascus was opened on 10 June 1945. The airline was considered an operating agency of the Ministry of Defense. That same year, their first airport was established in Kandara, a district of Jeddah.

During the rest of the 1940s Saudi Arabian expanded, serving new cities (Cairo, Damascus and Beirut), providing a Hajj pilgrimage service flown from Lydda in British Palestine and purchasing two more DC-3s. Saudi Arabian also received substantial logistical and mechanical help from American airline TWA, and in 1949, the first of five Bristol 170s was received. These planes allowed Saudi Arabian to carry both passenger and cargo on the same flights.

The slow but steady growth continued during the 1950s and services were inaugurated to Istanbul, Karachi, Amman, Kuwait City, Asmara, and Port Sudan. The fleet also saw a small growth during the 1950s, with five DC-4s and ten Convair 340s arriving. The CV340 was Saudi Arabian's first pressurised-cabin airplane. In 1959, the airline's first maintenance centre was inaugurated in Jeddah. Also during this decade, the very important shuttle route between Jeddah and Riyadh was established.

In 1962 the airline took delivery of two Boeing 720s, making history by becoming the first Middle Eastern airline to fly jets. On February 19, 1963, the airline became a registered company, with King Faisal signing the papers that declared Saudi Arabian a fully independent company. DC-6s and Boeing 707s were later bought, the airline joined the Arab Air Carriers Organization, or AACO, and services were started to Sharjah, Tehran, Khartoum, Dubai, Bombay, Tunis, Rabat, Tripoli, Frankfurt, Geneva, and London.

In the 1970s a new livery was introduced, the operating name was changed from Saudi Arabian Airlines to Saudia on 1 April 1972, and Boeing 737 and Boeing 747 equipment was bought. The 737s replaced the DC-9s. The first all-cargo flights between Saudi Arabia and Europe were also started, and Lockheed L-1011s and Fairchild F-27s were introduced. New services, including the Arabian Express no reservation shuttle flights system for the Jeddah to Riyadh route, and the Special Flight Services (SFS), were founded. Special Flight Services is still a service the airline offers for government-related and celebrity flights. Rome, Paris, Muscat, Kano, and Stockholm were inaugurated as Saudi Arabian Airlines cities. Joint operations with Pan Am from Jeddah to New York started on 3 February 1979.

Some new non-route-related services opened during the 1980s for the airline, such as Saudia Catering. Flights were started to Bangkok, Dhaka, Mogadishu, Nairobi, New York (Saudi Arabian's flights to New York are the only flights in the world that overfly 4 continents: it begins in Asia, passing over Africa and Europe, before landing in North America), Madrid, Singapore, Manila, New Delhi, Islamabad, Seoul, Baghdad, Amsterdam, Colombo, Nice, Lahore, Brussels, Dakar, Kuala Lumpur and Taipei. Horizon Class, a business class service, was established between Jeddah and Cairo, and cargo hubs were built at Brussels and Taipei. Airbus A300s, Fokker F-28s, and Cessna Citations were also added to the fleet, the Citations for the SFS service. To finish the decade, services were introduced in 1989 to Larcana and Addis Ababa.
Saudi Arabian Airlines Boeing 777 approaching London Heathrow
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Saudi Arabian Airlines Boeing 777 approaching London Heathrow

In the 1990s services were introduced to Orlando, Chennai, Tokyo, Asmara, Washington, D.C., Johannesburg, Alexandria, Athens, Milan, Málaga, and Sanaa. Boeing 777s, McDonnell Douglas MD-90s and MD-11s were introduced, smoking was banned on certain flights to Muslim countries as well as on all domestic flights and new stewardess uniforms designed by Adnan Akbar were introduced. A new corporate identity was launched on 16 July 1996, featuring an elegant sand coloured fuselage with contrasting dark blue tailfin, the centre of which featured a stylised representation of the House of Saud crest. The Saudia name was dropped in the identity revamp, and Saudi Arabian Airlines was resurrected.

On 8 October 2000, Prince Sultan Bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, the Saudi Minister of Defence & Aviation, signed a contract to conduct studies for the privatisation of Saudi Arabian Airlines. In preparation for privatisation, the airline is currently restructuring to allow non-core units including catering, ground handling services and maintenance as well as the Prince Sultan Flight Academy in Jeddah, to transform into commercial units and profit centres. In April 2005, the Saudi government indicated that the airline may also lose its monopoly on domestic services [1].

Saudi Arabian Airlines did achieve operational profits in 2002, which doubled in 2003 but the profits are primarily due to over a billion riyal on deferred income amortised annually in the income statement courtesy of the 70 aircraft gifted to the airline by the Government. In 2004 the airline carried over 15 million passengers and recorded a 14% rise in profits.

The airline ordered 15 Embraer 170 aircraft in a deal worth $400 million in April 2005.

Incidents and accidents

Saudi Arabian suffered the first of two major air tragedies on 19 August 1980. Flight 163, a Lockheed L-1011 on a flight from Karachi to Jeddah via Riyadh reported smoke in the aft cargo compartment shortly after take off from the capital's King Khalid International Airport. The aircraft returned to the airport and landed safely, however an emergency evacuation of the aircraft was not ordered. With a delay in evacuating the passengers, fire consumed the aircraft on the ground, killing all 287 passengers and 14 crew.

On 12 November 1996 Flight 763, a Boeing 747 en route from Delhi to Dhahran, collided with an Air Kazakhstan Ilyushin Il-76 'Candid' at 15,000 feet several miles from Delhi. All 312 passengers on board the 747 and 37 passengers on the Il-76 died in the accident, making it the worst mid-air collision in history. An investigation by the Indian authorities later blamed the Air Kazakhstan crew's poor understanding of English and failure to heed air traffic control warnings.

In August 2001, a Saudi Boeing 747 that lost direction while being towed was damaged beyond repair after falling in a drainage canal at Kuala Lumpur International.

Services

See Saudi Arabian Airlines destinations for a comprehensive list of cities served.

New routes

It will increase the frequency on its Jeddah-Cairo route from 13 to 22 flights a week by June 2006. It will operate 2 flights on Monday, 3 flights on Tue/Wed/Thu/Saturday and 4 flights on Fri/Sunday. Most flights will operate with a Boeing 747-300 with one flight a day, excepting Monday, operating with a Boeing 777-200.

Fleet

The Saudi Arabian Airlines fleet consists of the following aircraft (at June 2005):

A number of military C-130s are painted with the Saudi colors and are flown by Royal Saudi Air Force crews to support Saudi official activities in the region and Europe.

Other facts of interest

External links


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