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Not What You Meant?  There are 89 definitions for Atlas.  Also try: KK or OGE.

Atlasjet

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Atlasjet
IATA
KK
ICAO
KKK
Callsign
ATLASJET
Founded 2001
Fleet size 11
Destinations 28
Parent company ETS
Headquarters Istanbul, Turkey
Key people Tuncay Doganer (manager)
Website: http://www.atlasjet.com/en
Atlasjet Boeing 757-200
Atlasjet Boeing 757-200
Atlasjet Airbus A320-232 refilling at Valladolid Airport
Atlasjet Airbus A320-232 refilling at Valladolid Airport

Atlasjet is an airline based in Istanbul, Turkey. It operates domestic scheduled passenger services and regular charter flights to Europe, Kazakhstan and the United Arab Emirates. It serves Germany on behalf of Öger Tours. Its main base is Atatürk International Airport, Istanbul, with hubs at Adnan Menderes Airport, İzmir and Antalya Airport.[1]

Contents

History

The airline was established on 14 March 2001 and started operations on 1 June 2001. Formerly known as Atlasjet International Airlines, it was set up as a subsidiary of Öger Holdings. In 2004 ETS Group acquired a 45% stake, increased in February 2006 to 90% when it acquired Öger's 45% holding. It is now owned by ETS Group (90%) and Tuncay Doganer (Vice-President and Chief Executive) (10%) and has 730 employees.[1]

Services

Atlasjet operates the following services (at October 2007): {

Incidents and accidents

  • On 7 February 2005, an Atlasjet Airbus A320 skidded off the runway after landing at Atatürk International Airport, Istanbul, Turkey, in snowy conditions. There were no fatalities among the 6 crew and 164 passengers.[2]
  • On 18 August 2007, an Atlasjet airplane traveling from Northern Cyprus to Istanbul was hijacked. The hijackers landed it in Antalya, a Turkish province on the Mediterranean coast, Turkish channel NTV reported. The hijackers claimed to be al-Qaida members and that only the crew was left on board the jet. There were 136 passengers and six crew aboard when the plane left Ercan Airport in the breakaway Turkish Cypriot state in Northern Cyprus. The two hijackers surrendered after holding several people hostage for more than four hours. They were identified as Mehmet Resat Ozlu, a Turk, and Abdul Aziz Maliki, who was believed to be a Palestinian carrying a Syrian passport. According to Turkish Transport Minister Osman Gunes, the hijackers "apologized to the Turkish nation" for seizing the plane.
  • On 30 November 2007, Atlasjet Flight 4203, a MD-83 with 49 passengers and 7 crew aboard crashed with no survivors near Keçiborlu, Isparta in south-western Turkey.

Fleet

The Atlasjet fleet includes the following aircraft (at December 2007):

Atlasjet average fleet age is 6.9 years (December 2007).[3]

Aircraft orders

External links

References

  1. ^ a b "Directory: World Airlines", Flight International, 2007-03-27, p. 80. 
  2. ^ Flight International, July 2005
  3. ^ [1]

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Atlasjet from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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