Regulator suspends BWA flights

Directorate orders Bosnian Wand Airlines flight suspension

The Bosnia and Herzegovina Directorate of Civil Aviation has suspended all flights which the Iraqi-backed Bosnian Wand Airlines (BWA) planned to operate from Sarajevo. BWA, which has delayed it launch on several occasions, was to introduce services from Sarajevo to Stockholm, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Malmo and Athens from February 20. In a statement, the regulator said, “We would like to inform the public that Bosnian Wand Airlines does not hold an Air Operator Certificate (AOC) issued by the Bosnia and Herzegovina Directorate of Civil Aviation, which is a necessary requirement for the provision of air transport of passengers and goods for commercial purposes”. BWA, which has leased an Airbus A321 aircraft from Air Méditerranée, planned to operate flights under Hermes Airlines’ IATA designator code "H3". Hermes is a subsidiary of Air Méditerranée and is based in Athens.

The Directorate of Civil Aviation notes that BWA was issued temporary permits to maintain flights between the Greek capital and Sarajevo, since it operates under Hermes Airlines’ codes, thus rights were essentially granted to the Greek carrier. However, the regulator requested clarification from BWA as to its relationship with Hermes Airlines. Since it did not receive a response by January 30, it has revoked BWA of all rights on the Athens route as well. Meanwhile, BWA has been operating ad-hoc charters between Sweden, Greece and the Middle East. The company was established by the Baghdad-based Al Wand group and has recruited 28 crew members from Bosnia and Herzegovina.

BWA, which has been selling tickets for flights from Sarajevo, says it has temporarily suspended planned services from Bosnia and Herzegovina’s capital and will offer a full refund to all passengers who have purchased tickets. Officials from both BWA and the Directorate of Civil Aviation met in Banja Luka on Wednesday to discuss licensing issues. BWA has said it will continue pursuing a Bosnian AOC, which would allow it to operate flights out of Sarajevo. The company adds that none of its services from the European Union to the Middle East have been affected. BWA has so far operated only one flight from Sarajevo - a promotional service for members of the press to Athens.

Comments

  1. Anonymous10:00

    That lasted long lol

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous13:03

      I think Golden Air from Maribor is the record breaker. It lasted a full week before they suspended flights. Dalmatian never took off so I'm not going to include them.

      Delete
  2. Anonymous10:10

    Have a feeling we will be reading a similar article for Air Croatia very soon.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:15

      Air Croatia and BWA fail

      Delete
  3. Anonymous10:31

    I don't feel sorry for the people who booked tickets with them. Who could be that stupid.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous10:40

    This looked fishy from the beginning but I do like their livery

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous10:48

    It seems like Air Serbia cancelled today's flights to Prague and Tel Aviv, what is happening, any info ? Sorry if I was not right.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:53

      Prague might be weather related. It's horrid in Belgrade at the moment.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous13:06

      Let's also not forget that JU cancelled a great number of flights this February so maybe that has something to do with it.

      However the weather in this part of Belgrade was bad but not that bad. Since BEG is in a plan there might have been strong winds.

      I suspect TLV was cancelled due to 'fantastic' loads.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous13:09

      You have to understand that flights were not cancelled. A frequency increase was planned for December/January and they went back to October levels for February and March. It was planned like that from the beginning.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous13:16

      Actually no, a lot of February frequencies were cancelled in January. When the winter timetable was announced a few months ago these frequencies were planned.

      Delete
  6. Anonymous11:52

    Dalmatian and BWA - fantastic airlines.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous11:59

    Bosnian Wand Airlines Fail

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:01

      hahaha I was waiting for this :D

      Delete
  8. Anonymous13:02

    An 'airline' which had a photo of its cabin crew with oxygen masks as the background photo on its website. No wonder.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Anonymous13:04

    Ovo je neko zesce pranje para.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous13:20

    OT: Now it's official. BEG published its January numbers.

    Passengers: 308.381 (14%)
    Movement: 4.506 (9%)
    Cargo: 608.243 kg (6%)
    Mail: 151.218 (49%)

    Overall a great month and it's nice to see cargo and mail on the rise. Let's hope this trend continues, especially in February which has traditionally been a disastrous month for BEG.

    Note: INN-NS do not comment please.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. IR 72016:29

      February is a disastrous month for pretty much every airline and every airport in the Northern Hemisphere. Hopefully things get more evened-out now with all the transfer pax Air Serbia is getting.

      Delete
    2. JATBEGMEL19:12

      Considering the small increases, the reduction of the midnight wave and the addition of ZAG, this isnt too bad of a result. I was worried the growth would be smaller.

      If February stays at 14%, this will bring the result a little under the Jan 2014 result which is good, with a wait until 2016 for that month to go over 300.000 pax.

      August being the busiest needs a 5% increase to have over 600.000 pax, lets assume a 15% increase and we have 662.930 pax.

      As a couple of comments have gone, the lack of a midnight wave is killing the CLF for the morning wave. I hope this returns soon.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous21:57

      How come the post increased by whole 49%(?), that's huge!!!

      Delete
    4. Anonymous22:19

      True, true... however Belgrade with almost 700.000 passengers in a month will be like a zoo. lol

      They definitely need more shops, restaurants and cafés.

      Delete
  11. Anonymous13:24

    Ode BWA dolazi W6.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous13:31

    OT:

    Eurolot od 31.3.2015. ukida sve svoje linije, liniju za Zagreb od 1.4. preuzima LOT Polish Airlines.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous13:34

      Да, вероватно ће слати Е170 што је супер.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous13:49

      Letece sa Q400 u bojama LO
      INN-NS

      Delete
    3. Anonymous14:19

      Oce li sezonske preuzesti LOT ili nista od toga? SPU je imao linije prema Varsavi, Gdanjsku i Krakovu, pa eventualno ukidanje nije bas mali broj...

      Delete
    4. Anonymous14:25

      Svih 10 Q400 preuzima LO valjda ce nositi i livery od LO.
      Ni jednu liniju K2 nece ukinuti te letove ce samo obavljati LO
      INN-NS

      Delete
    5. Anonymous15:48

      I guess you're wrong INN-NS, from airliners.net:

      None of the "own" K2 routes will be taken over by LO. LO will only take over domestic feeder flights, operated by K2 aircraft.
      LO cannot open any new routes until winter 2015 season, per conditions of their EU financial assistance.

      Delete
    6. Anonymous15:55

      Pa onda znaci da ce K2 da bankrotira ?
      I da nece leteti vise za ZAG
      Neverujem da bi to dozvolio LO.
      INN-NS

      Delete
    7. Anonymous16:51

      Letove će obavljati LOT, postojeće linije se ne ukidaju!

      Delete
    8. Anonymous16:56

      Sa cime ce obavljati kad im je E flota i onako zauzeta.
      INN-NS

      Delete
  13. Anonymous15:17

    OT : Why JU112 BEG-SJJ A319 has just been diverted back to Belgrade ? At same time OS's A319 and JA's AT7 landed safely. All other flights at SJJ are mostly according to the schedule.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous15:20

      Sorry, second A319 was JP's.

      Delete
    2. Could be weather related? OU Q400 is delayed by an hour while FZ landed 88 minutes late.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous15:54

      What is happening in Zagreb? Horrible delays this afternoon!

      Delete
    4. Anonymous16:13

      JP with A319 to Sarajevo???

      Delete
  14. Anonymous16:34

    OT: Are Air Serbia pilots allowed to fly and land manually, without using the autopilot? Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous16:52

      Why wouldn't any pilot be allowed to land manually as long as weather conditions allowed it so?

      Delete
    2. Anonymous16:55

      Smeju.
      INN-NS

      Delete
    3. Anonymous01:03

      today, a BH Airlines flight landed at bnx under bad weather conditions. It was snowing heavily but, fortunately, the temperature close to the ground was somewhat above zero.

      Delete
  15. Anonymous17:21

    It looks in pretty good condition.

    What is the Atr in-there?

    ReplyDelete
  16. Anonymous17:22

    Another interesting thing is that one of the JU A320s is parked in front of Jat Tehnika.

    https://fbcdn-sphotos-e-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/t31.0-8/10952966_886271514765039_3399744701913462118_o.jpg

    ReplyDelete
  17. Anonymous17:24

    YU-ANJ was/is the B733 in the best condition. It was the one that was held hostage in Istanbul during the 1990s so it has the most cycles left. Also it's cabin was quite good.

    As for the A320, for a few days now only one A320 was flying due to light loads.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous17:29

    I hope that this summer these old ladies will fly only to summer charter destinations. They are not configured for regular flights. Flying experience was really not good, especially on longer flights.

    Nothing worse than being stuck on the Bulgarian to London!!

    ReplyDelete
  19. AirCEO17:38

    OT: G’day! Rumor has it that Air Serbia is prepping 2014 financial report to be published soon. Mates, you have to polish that report until its fair dinkum! Ace that report bloody good and tell those big mobs of Brusseleers to rack off! With strong numbers coming in it should be a piece of piss to crank out a ridgy-didge report! Can’t wait for ripper report to come out! Cheers!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous20:13

      Znači ako izveštaj kaže da prave profit i sve potvrde revizori onda ih više neće cimati razni Birnovi i M.Brkići?

      Delete
  20. Anonymous17:55

    OT: if they start flying to Zurich, I am gonna get so pissed off.


    Niš čeka "iznenađenje" Er Srbije

    http://www.b92.net/biz/vesti/srbija.php?yyyy=2015&mm=02&dd=06&nav_id=955451

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous18:11

      "Ugovor bi omogućio da 'Er Srbija' svakog časa može da donese odluku o poletanju iz Niša, a mi takvo iznenadjenje i priželjkujemo"

      To me it seems like INI's wet dreams. Plus, didn't JU already say that they are not interested in flying out of Nis?

      Delete
    2. Anonymous18:11

      It will be Nis-Melbourne with Boeing 77W.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous18:12

      Perth actually.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous18:19

      With a fuel stop in Innsbruck!

      Delete
    5. Anonymous18:23

      77W nema toliki domet da leti za MEL to moze jedino 77L
      INN-NS

      Delete
    6. Anonymous18:35

      There are going to be weight restrictions and possibly a technical stop! :O

      Exciting times ahead!

      Delete
  21. Anonymous18:02

    "Bulgarians" are not among the fleet. They have been returned.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Anonymous18:12

    Yes, I am talking about last summer. Even though the Bulgarian was much worse they still have the same configuration.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Anonymous19:03

    @AnonymousFebruary 6, 2015 at 5:24 PM

    On the place of ASL i would send it to IST every time and say "ah you can't catch it now!" LOL :D

    ReplyDelete
  24. Anonymous19:19

    77L sa Dženeral Elektrik GE90-115B1 endžins.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous19:29

      Posto me ismevate zaboravili ste nesto GE GE90-115B1L
      INN-NS

      Delete
    2. Anonymous19:55

      Ko tebe sme da zeza kad ti sve znaš? Molim te lepo.

      Delete
  25. JATBEGMEL19:42

    Both A320's are flying. At the time of writing:

    - YU-APG enroute to CDG at 38.000 feet as JU314
    - YU-APH enroute to ZRH at 36.000 feet as JU374

    The entire Airbus fleet had flown today. Only YU-APH didnt fly for 48 hours from the 3-5 Feb. YU-APG didnt fly this morning either. Perhaps some light maintenance was performed.

    YU-ALU isnt flying and hasnt flown in the past week at least. Anyone with info?

    As for the Aviolet fleet, YU-AND, NI, NJ and NK seem to be flying

    As for YU-ANF, NH, NL, NV and NW, it seems theyre the ones left for spares?

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous21:43

    OT: ZAG ima od 02/15 FAH 734F let svakodnevno za BGY, izgleda da je za DHL

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous21:55

      Let ce da obavlja Air Contractors za DHL
      Jel postoji cargo linija iz BGY za BEG
      Hvala unapred.
      INN-NS

      Delete
    2. Anonymous22:23

      DHL is using AN-26 of a Hungarian company which operates flights BUD-BEG I believe 4-5 times a week

      Delete
    3. It was CityLine Hungary, but from June 2014. it's RAF Avia - Latvin cargo company, also using An26.

      Све најбоље!

      Delete
  27. Anonymous21:53

    Objectively, does Air Serbia needs a 3rd A320 for the time being?

    ReplyDelete
  28. JATBEGMEL22:14

    No. A319 seems to be enough capacity as it is. Personally, id like to see them double the ATR fleet with 4 more A319's in the next 2 years.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Anonymous22:16

    Air Serbia is not using its A320s to the fullest as it does not need them in winter time, the loads are not great all the time.

    For example today:

    BEG-SKP 65 pax. // SKP-BEG 64 pax Atr-72
    BEG-SOF 83 pax // SOF-BEG 79 pax A319
    BEG-OTP 54 pax // OTP-BEG 90 pax A319

    A320 to AUH departed with 36 pax and returned with 67.

    Cheers from AUH. :)

    ReplyDelete
  30. Anonymous22:17

    Oh and just to add, there is a good possibility that OTP will become a regular A320 in summer.

    Off to sleep now. Ciao. :)

    ReplyDelete
  31. Cevapi i Luk22:27

    If those stats are true than ASL is doing well on those routes. I would have to say those are healthy loads for short flights like that in FEBRUARY except maybe that flight with 54 pax to OTP. If ASL was using atr-72 on flights to SOF and OTP then the load would be 100%.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Anonymous22:29

    Thanks for the numbers :)

    ReplyDelete
  33. Cevapi i Luk22:30

    as for AUH they are obviously not doing too well, I was referring to SKP, SOF, and OTP

    ReplyDelete
  34. Anonymous22:32

    Damn, Air Serbia still has "Qatar loads" to AUH. Is it like that every day?

    ReplyDelete
  35. Anonymous22:33

    ^ haha, +1 for "Qatar loads"

    ReplyDelete
  36. Anonymous22:38

    EY loads are much better, JU's loads are more seasonal but they are far from bad. In January they had around 85 passengers on average which is ok.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Cevapi i Luk22:39

    Does anybody know the loads Qatar has nowadays? Do you think they might improve after linking it with SOF? If I remember correctly during summer time they had around 25 pax.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Anonymous22:42

    TXL-DUS i AMS su takodje odlicni.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  39. Anonymous22:45

    DUS je odlican
    TXL je dobar
    AMS je ok. Vecernji let za Beograd je obicno uzas zato sto ne mogu da se nude presedanja.

    Najprofitabilnija linija je SVO.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Anonymous22:55

    Kad bi uz ona 2 A319 od EY i 330 dosao jedan A321 da leti za SVO to bi bilo super,
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  41. Anonymous22:59

    Jok, nema potrebe za sirokotrupnim vazduhoplovima, A321 tokom leta je ok zato sto imaju saradnju sa SU. Puno putnika u biznisu.

    ReplyDelete
  42. Anonymous23:02

    I don't know about OTP bud BUD already seems to be a regular 737 :/

    ReplyDelete
  43. Anonymous23:06

    ^ They are using it due to lack of ATR aircraft. BUD is doing not bad but catastrophic. I

    ReplyDelete
  44. Anonymous23:13

    Yes, if the Atr went, the loads would have been meh... Just ok.

    ReplyDelete
  45. Anonymous23:15

    Budapest departed tonight with 42 passengers and returns with 28. Return flight is no bad because there is Abu Dhabi, Larnaca, Moscow and Beirut. On a slow night BUD happens to return with just 5 passengers. lol

    ReplyDelete
  46. JATBEGMEL23:18

    For JU, AUH does well, and those flights do know to go out full, especially june-september period. I even traveled in late october with JU to AUH and the flight had very few spare seats. EY loads are much much better and average 95% year round. I would say AUH for both carriers is very far from QR loads.

    As for A330 and A321, this is the least of JU priorities. The 2 A320's are big enough capacity for now. A321 is too much capacity, let alone the A330. Regional network is still not the best to bring in widebodies. Better and expanding, but not yet ready.

    ReplyDelete
  47. Anonymous23:21

    The A321 would be an option during the busy season and on the following routes:

    - SVO
    - CDG
    - LHR
    - ZRH
    - ATH

    ReplyDelete
  48. Anonymous23:27

    @AnonymousFebruary 6, 2015 at 11:06 PM

    I know, was just kidding and paraphrasing the guy @10:17PM ;)

    ReplyDelete
  49. Aэrologic23:32

    The only route where the A321 would operate with a profit almost year-round that's Moscow. But you don't add a type for a single route. It's easier to sell the spare seats onto a SU flight or just add an additional A319 departure, which is what they did. At 4-5 daily rotations i think the market is pretty much maxed-out.

    ReplyDelete
  50. Anonymous23:44

    Kad bi dosao A321 u configuraciji C12 i Y196 da bi bio profitabilan na linijama SVO-CDG.
    ASL bi bilo bolje da sto pre uzme jedan A332 od EY
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  51. Anonymous23:49

    Zaboravljate ZRH.

    ReplyDelete
  52. Anonymous00:07

    Da ZRH-DUS-LHR-AMS .
    Opet kazem ASL treba sto pre da uzme jedan A332.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  53. Anonymous00:13

    BEG nema kapaciteta za A332, vec je prenatrpan.

    ReplyDelete
  54. Anonymous00:18

    BEG ima i kapacitet za 77W i A388.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  55. Anonymous00:23

    U teoriji da, u praksi nema. BEG je mali aerodrom i sa povecanim brojem avio operacija situacija je postala jos gora. Pogledaj samo kako je kada sleti sirokotrupni avion. Pretpostavljam da nikada nisi bio na aerodromu.

    ReplyDelete
  56. Anonymous00:36

    Ja jesam bio na aerodromu sve moze da se prilagodi da A332 lako ima mesta sve zavisi od timetable kad leti i nadam se da ce koncesionar uskoro preuzeti BEG.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  57. Anonymous00:42

    Svaki put kada sleti sirokotrupni avion nastane haos na aerodromu, secam se samo kako je bilo kada je sleteo etihadov b773.

    ReplyDelete
  58. Anonymous00:53

    Заборављаш да за нашег аустријског мачора све у Београду, Србији... мора бити фантастично и савршено. :)

    ReplyDelete
  59. Anonymous00:57

    Za A332 je idealno vreme negdo izmedju 14-16h mislim da bi tad mogao cak i 77w DA SE SMETI:
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  60. Anonymous00:58

    Za A332 je idealno vreme negdo izmedju 14-16h mislim da bi tad mogao cak i 77W da se smesti
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  61. Anonymous01:00

    Па да али не функционишу тако ствари, све зависи од реда летења. Чињеница је да је београдски аеродром мали за редовне широкотрупне летелице. Чак и излаз А1 не може да прими било шта веће од Б763.

    ReplyDelete
  62. Anonymous01:09

    Pa ja sam gore isto napisao da zavisi od reda letenja.
    U 2 ujutru moze i A388 stati.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  63. Anonymous01:10

    У два ујутру не може јер је скоро цела флота у Београду. Ако Б773 заузме две стајанке онда би А380 сигурно заузео 4.

    ReplyDelete
  64. Anonymous01:12

    Ko kaze da mora na gate da ide nemora u opste.
    INN-NS

    ReplyDelete
  65. JATBEGMEL01:13

    There is no point in bringing in a new type and larger aircraft for a few destinations. What Air Serbia should look at is frequency which it is doing. This cannot be done if capacity is being added with larger aircraft. Air Serbia may be able to run say 2 A321, but that will be at the cost of frequencies, which JU doesnt want nor need.

    Regarding the widebodies, BEG can easily accomodate say several B767 type aircraft at a time, the HY B763 used to frequently park at A1, Someone here mentioned about the wingspan of the A330 being a restricting factor, to which he is correct, as the wingspan is almost double to that of the B767, meaning it wouldnt be able to park at A1, and at other gates would block a few gates while it is parked. One solution is to use the B1-B7 stands, but busing people to remote stands isnt the best solution, especially since the holding areas arent that big either. BEG mainly handled DC10 type aircraft, they didnt have the large wingspan as the A330 does and BEG hasnt adapted or had the need to adapt since for larger aircraft such as the A330.

    Dissapointing is the new stands C7-C10 dont seem to have been projected for widebodies. This could be fixed by further expanding the apron to allow 4 widebody gates since they will anyway extend the terminal in that direction. Might as well do it from the start when there is a short-medium plan term for them.

    @INN

    BEG would struggle to accommodate the A380 if it could take the aircraft. The Serbian DCV has the info on its website, you can look for yourself the airport plans and capabilities. Quite a few things hold back BEG to take on the aircraft. Taxiways are not suited for the A380 and neither is the runway the desired width for the aircraft. The apron would be a restricting factor for the aircraft because of its size, just like with the B777. For someone who has friends and contacts or what ever at the airport, in JU etc, you should know this.

    ReplyDelete
  66. Aэrologic02:17

    "as the wingspan is almost double to that of the B767, meaning it wouldnt be able to park at A1..."

    Well, it isn't actually double, it is only about 10m longer (48 vs 60m). Regardless, BEG can currently handle few widebodies, let's say 2 A330 in JU's fleet and some foreign airline operating without problem, they'll simply be parked at B1-B7. Busing to the gate is nothing surrealistic, it's being done at many airports around the world, Doha or Delhi to name a few, even minuscule Zagreb.

    The much bigger constraint than gate accommodation is JU's network, both regional and to everywhere else outside Western Europe, which ranges from pathetic or inexistent* (with notably Spain still missing in the Western half).

    *i'm talking of all the regions that could be served with the type of metal JU currently flies (flights ~3 hours, that would fit in the same departure banks)

    https://pp.vk.me/c623921/v623921496/1b87b/Ndb9fMMDMOk.jpg

    ReplyDelete
  67. Aэrologic02:19

    With JU's network staying the way it is now, it's gonna get stuck in growth sooner than later due to the asymmetry of the very network planning.

    ReplyDelete
  68. JATBEGMEL02:37

    @ Aerologic

    Nothing wrong with bus gates, ive used them in large hubs like BKK, MEL, DXB, DOH, MUC, FRA just to name a few, the holding areas in BEG arent large enough for the smaller wide body (A330) capacity which need to be bigger. Capacity for this size isnt the issue, but we do have the 'special' couple of people here talking of A380 capabilities.

    ReplyDelete
  69. Anonymous04:21

    No big deal, in many world airports the queues from the gates extend well into the corridor, having two or three of those a day won't make BEG totally crash. After all you're here to fly in the plane, not in the gate, where you shouldn't spend more than 15-20 min. I can't imagine it being worse than Wizz Air experience with full A320 at A9, people still keep using it. Alternatively you can load the a/c from two gates.

    ReplyDelete
  70. Anonymous08:26

    Of course, you can also board a widebody from A10 if you want to and if you don't give a damn about passenger experience which is something JU does. That's why boarding via buses is not an option.

    Also, with the current luggage sorting facility the last thing BEG needs is to add a widebody to the mix.

    ReplyDelete
  71. Anonymous14:28

    Stop talking shit, you're full of it.

    ReplyDelete
  72. Anonymous18:43

    Frustrated much?

    ReplyDelete

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