article

There is also a magazine called Asiana.

Asiana Airlines () is one of South Korea's two major airlines. It is both smaller and younger than Korean Air. Asiana's headquarters and overseas hub are located at Incheon International Airport and its domestic hub is at Gimpo International Airport (formerly Kimpo International Airport).

History


The airline was established on 17 February 1988 and started operations in December 1988 with flights to Bangkok. It was formed by the KumhoAsiana Group (formerly Kumho Group) as part of the South Korean government's policy to create a second flag carrier. The South Korean government has given its approval for foreign ownership of the airline to increase from 20% to 50%.

The airline is owned by Private investors (30.53%), Kumho Industrial (29.51%), Kumho Petrochemical (15.05%), foreign investors (11.9%), Korea Development Bank (7.18%), others (5.83%) and employs 6,411 staff (at January 2005).

Asiana Airlines recently (on 1 February 2006) changed its CI(Corporate Identity) as parent company Kumho Asiana Group decided to unify different CIs of its divisions. Also, Asiana Airlines is considering of changing uniform of flight attendants and livery of the aircraft by 2008, the company's 20th anniversary.

Destinations


Code Sharing


The airline has code-share agreements with the following airlines (as of May 2006):

Fleet


The Asiana Airlines fleet consists of the following aircraft (as of July 2005):

The airline also has 2 Airbus A319-100 aircraft on order.

The average Asiana Airlines fleet age is 7 years old in April 2006.

Incidents


  • An Airbus A321 en route Cheju-Seoul (Flight OZ8942) flew through a hailstorm on June 9, 2006 which blew off the aircraft's nose cone, destroyed its radar and shattered the front cockpit windows. The aircraft landed safely at Gimpo Airport.
  • An Asiana Airlines B747 attempted a U-Turn in the gate area of the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport and the wingtip of the B 747 imbedded an Aeroflot Ilyushin IL-62 tail. No one was injured.

External links


See also


Airlines of South Korea

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Asiana Airlines".

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