South Africa has suspended the air operator certificate for Comair as a precautionary measure for 24 hours, effectively grounding its fleet and affecting passengers using low-cost airline Kulula as well as British Airways flights, the transport ministry said on Saturday.
→ Nigerian airlines cancel some flights due to fuel shortage.
Comair has since 1996 serviced local and regional routes from South Africa under the British Airways livery as part of a license agreement.
“The regulator took this decision independently, in line with its mandate to oversee aviation safety,” Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula said in a statement, Reported Reuters.
The regulator, the South African Civil Aviation Authority (SACAA), said in the past month Comair had experienced safety problems ranging from “engine failures, engine malfunction and landing gear malfunctions, amongst others”.
→ UAE’s Flydubai 2021 profit rebounds above pre-pandemic levels.
“This is a precautionary suspension for a period of 24 hours, within which the operator must demonstrate to the regulator that the risk and safety management systems are effective in managing potential hazards,” the SACAA said in a statement on its website.
“The operator has until tomorrow morning, Sunday, 13 March 2022 to meet the requirements from the regulator, failing which the approval will be suspended indefinitely, pending the satisfactory closing of the findings,” said SACAA.
On the Kulula.com website the airline said its executive team was engaging with the regulator in a bid to resolve the issue.
Photo: Bob Adams/Wikipedia
Related Topics
VietJet to Receive Its First Boeing 737 MAX After Nine-Year Wait
IndiGo to Connect Mumbai and Copenhagen Starting October
SAS Launches First Direct Route Between Scandinavia and Korea with Flights from Copenhagen to Seoul
KLM Launches New Non-Stop Route Between Amsterdam and Hyderabad, India

Plataforma Informativa de Aviación Comercial con 13 años de trayectoria.