Lionair

Not to be confused with Lion Air or Lionair (Luxembourg).
Lionair
IATA ICAO Callsign
LN LEO Sri-Lion
Founded 1993
Commenced operations 1994
Ceased operations 2006
Hubs
Fleet size 6
Destinations 10
Headquarters Ratmalana, Sri Lanka
Key people Chandran Rutnam Founder and Chairman
Angelina Jolie is seen during her to visit to Jaffna after traveled by Lionair at the Jaffna Airport in April 2003.

Lionair was an airline with its head office in the Asian Aviation Centre in Sri Lanka on the grounds of Ratmalana Airport near Colombo.[1] It was a privately owned charter operator. Its main base was Ratmalana International Airport.[2]


History

The airline was a brainchild of Chandran Rutnam and was established in October 1993. The airline started its operations on 24 October 1994. Initially it was owned by Lionvert Inc USA (51%), a United States-based investors group and by Sri Lankan investors (49%). Lionvert sold its stake in late 1997. Lionair suspended domestic services when an Antonov An-24 aircraft went missing shortly after it took off from Jaffna in 1998, but resumed services in October 2002.[2]

Lionair had operated services between Colombo and Jaffna since October 1996, until the suspension of services in 1998. They had hoped to resume services in November 1998.[3]

In 2005 Lionair applied to the Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka to operate services to the following destinations: Athens, Chennai, Kochi, Denpasar, Dhaka, Dubai, Guangzhou, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, Kuwait, London, Malé, Melbourne, Mumbai, Rome, Singapore, Sydney, Tiruchirapalli, Thiruvananthapuram and Zürich, using Avro 748 and Airbus A320 aircraft.[4]

In 2006 Connexus Air joined with Lionair to assist in the lease and setup of domestic operations using a BAe Jetstream 41 aircraft. It was planned to start the first service by November 2006.[5]

Terminated Routes

Country-City Airport Code Airport Name Notes Refs
IATAICAO
Australia
MelbourneMELYMMLMelbourne AirportTerminated
SydneySYDYSSYSydney AirportTerminated
Bangladesh
DhakaDACVGZRShahjalal International AirportTerminated
Greece
AthensATHLGAVAthens International AirportTerminated
India
ChennaiMAAVOMMChennai International AirportTerminated
KochiCOKVOCICochin International AirportTerminated
MumbaiBOMVABBChhatrapati Shivaji International AirportTerminated
TiruchirappalliTRZVOTRTiruchirappalli International AirportTerminated
TrivandrumTRVVOTVTrivandrum International AirportTerminated
Indonesia
DenpasarDPSWADDNgurah Rai International AirportTerminated
JakartaCGKWIIISoekarno–Hatta International AirportTerminated
Italy
RomeFCOLIRFLeonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino AirportTerminated
Kuwait
Kuwait CityKWIOKBKKuwait International AirportTerminated
Malaysia
Kuala LumpurKULWMKKKuala Lumpur International AirportTerminated
Maldives
MaléMLEVRMMIbrahim Nasir International AirportTerminated
People's Republic of China
GuangzhouCANZGGGGuangzhou Baiyun International AirportTerminated
Singapore
SingaporeSINWSSSSingapore Changi AirportTerminated
Sri Lanka
colomboCMBVCBIBandaranaike International AirportTerminated
colomboRMLVCCCRatmalana AirportTerminated
JaffnaJAFVCCJJaffna AirportTerminated
Switzerland
ZürichZRHLSZHZürich AirportTerminated
United Arab Emirates
DubaiDXBOMDBDubai International AirportTerminated
United Kingdom
LondonLHREGLLLondon Heathrow AirportTerminated

Fleet

As of August 2006 the Lionair fleet included:[6]

Aircraft Introduced Retired
Airbus A320
Antonov An-24
Avro 748
BAe Jetstream 41
Cessna 152
Piper

Accidents and incidents

References

  1. "Directory: World Airlines." Flight International. 23–29 March 2004. "TACA Peru" 100.
  2. 1 2 Flight International 5–11 April 2005
  3. 1 2 TamilNet 30 October 1998
  4. Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka 11 April 2005
  5. Connexus Air retrieved 23 November 2006
  6. Flight International, 3–9 October 2006
  7. Aviation Safety Network retrieved 23 November 2006
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.