The latest global aviation news in English.

A VIRGIN AUSTRALIA pilot has been badly injured after he was blown from stairs at the rear of a passenger jet by the engine thrust from a Qantas 747 jumbo, which was taxiing close to his plane.
Safety experts are looking into how the Qantas jumbo came close enough to the Boeing 737, which is operated by Virgin subsidiary Pacific Blue, to blow over the stairs on which the first officer was standing.
The pilot had been conducting pre-flight checks on the 737 passenger jet, which was parked at Brisbane Airport’s international terminal, shortly before it was due to take off to Bali on Friday.
The first officer suffered a fractured arm and leg when the aluminium stairs were blown over by the force of the Qantas jumbo’s engine blast. The 747 had been taxiing to a runway and was awaiting clearance from air traffic controllers to take off when the incident occurred.
The Qantas jumbo – QF8 – had stopped over in Brisbane to offload passengers while on its way to its final destination of Sydney.
A Virgin spokeswoman said the aluminium stairs to the 737 were blown over several times by the blast of the Qantas engines and the pilot’s injuries could have been worse.
“Our plane was in the right place at the right time,” she said. “The one dynamic which was different was the thrust level of the Qantas plane, which caused the stairs to blow over.”
But Qantas said its plane was “operating normally” under instructions from air traffic control and “at no stage” was excessive thrust used. The airline has reported the incident to the Australian Transport Safety Bureau.
Brisbane Airport said the Virgin aircraft was in its normal parking bay when the incident occurred and, although construction work is under way at the terminal, none was happening in the vicinity. There had been a suggestion that construction work meant the Virgin aircraft was in a slightly different position.

LONDON — Hundreds of air travellers were left stranded on Sunday after an incoming Air India flight was grounded for nine hours at London’s Gatwick Airport by a combination of fog and aviation rules.
Police were called onto the Boeing 777 jet as tempers frayed among the 200 passengers after the airline prevented them from disembarking.
The flight from Ahmedabad via Mumbai was due to arrive at Heathrow, London’s other major airport, at 08:00 local time (07:00 GMT) but was diverted to Gatwick due to fog.
The plane was unable to complete the 44-mile (70-kilometre) cross-city journey as aviation law limits the length of time for which flight crew are allowed to work in one shift.
A replacement crew was shuttled across the British capital, but reportedly got lost in Gatwick Airport.
Rahul Joglekar, a BBC journalist who was on the flight, said people became “very, very angry.”
“A group of passengers gathered close to the cockpit demanding an explanation from the pilot, but the pilots still didn’t come out,” he said.
The flight eventually arrived at Heathrow shortly before 17:30.
Fellow passenger Jas Johal blasted the lack of refreshments on board, saying “everyone was very hungry and there was no sign of any food.”
A spokesman for Gatwick said that it had been Air India’s decision to keep the passengers on board rather than arrange alternative transport to Heathrow.
“The plane remained off the runway and kept in the vicinity of the tarmac. The duty of care in those situations lies with the airline,” he said.
Source: AFP
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MANILA, Philippines – It’s not easy being Philippine Airlines (PAL) these days. Former employees continue to protest its outsourcing program. An unfavorable Supreme Court ruling was recalled in favor of the flag carrier. Passengers complain about cancelled or delayed flights.
“We took a hit on the image,” admitted PAL president and chief operating officer Jaime Bautista, in a briefing for ABS-CBN News editors last Friday. “We have to work harder to get back the trust and confidence of the passengers.”
The Philippine Airlines Employees Association (PALEA) held a wildcat strike last September 27, forcing the company to cancel its international and domestic flights which affected some 14,000 passengers. Even after its outsourcing program was implemented on October 1, the airline continued to cancel flights due to the lack of manpower of the third-party service providers.
Now, more than two weeks into its outsourcing program, Bautista said PAL operations are getting back to normal, although with a lower number of flights.
PAL now has 95 published flights, of which 59 are international and 36 are domestic. This is compared to the pre-strike level of 140 flights a day.
Challenges
Aside from its labor problems, PAL continues to face several external challenges that are stifling its growth.
First, the US Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) downgrade of the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP) to Category 2 and the European Commission decision to ban in 2010 all Philippine carriers from operating in member-countries of the European Union.
Bautista said the FAA issued the downgrade because of its audit findings that CAAP was not technically equipped to supervise airport operations. This has prevented PAL from increasing its flights to the US and from adding new routes in the US.
“It’s very unfair for PAL because other US carriers can mount as many flights as they want… Hawaiian Airlines now flies more to Honolulu-Manila than PAL. We want more frequencies to Hawaii and Guam, but we can’t,” he said.
PAL asked the FAA if they can allow the substitution of planes, so it can use the B777-300ER for its US flights but it was denied. “It wsa denied because they said it was a new technology and they had no confidence CAAP has the people to do oversight for this new technology and plane,” he said.
As for the EU placing Philippine carriers on a blacklist, Bautista said this has affected not just PAL’s sales in Europe, but also lessened business for the tourism industry.
“PAL is a certified safe airline. It is the only Philippine carrier that has an IOSA (IATA Operational Safety Audit) certification… The US, EU and IOSA acknowledge that PAL is safe, but it sees the deficiencies in CAAP,” he said.
“We comply with all the safety regulations of the CAAP and all regulatory agencies of countries where we operate. The airline industry is heavily regulated. We can’t not comply with the regulations. We always pass the audit and inspection. For PAL, safety is always number 1,” Bautista emphasized.
Overburdened NAIA
Another challenge for PAL is the severe runway limitations at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA). For an airport, the safe limit is 36 take-offs/landings per hour, but NAIA is pushing the maximum of 54 take-offs/landings per hour.
“It is difficult to get slots… Plus only the international flights are coordinated. There is no slot coordination for domestic flights, considering 51% of the flights in NAIA are domestic,” Bautista said.
Aside from this, there are also severe infrastructure and facilities constraints at the NAIA, such as congestion at its terminals, as well as danger from bird strikes.
PAL sees the problem getting worse, not better, with more foreign carriers allowed to increase flights.
“Because of these problems, Philippine carriers are hurt the most because Manila is our home base,” the PAL president said.
source: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com
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A SYDNEY-bound Qantas flight has been forced to turn back to Bangkok with engine problems after a bang onboard the plane, the airline says.
The Boeing 747 turned back one hour into the Bangkok-Sydney flight about 9.30pm last night after there was a bang and the plane vibrated, a Qantas spokesman said.
“About one hour after take-off, there was a bang and some vibrations were felt through the aircraft,” he said.
The pilot turned off one of the four engines as a safety precaution and the plane, carrying 356 passengers, landed safely back at Bangkok airport at 10.47pm (AEDT).
No emergency landing was required and all passengers were being accommodated on other services, the spokesman said.
One passenger reported seeing sparks shooting out of the engine, Macquarie Radio reported.
“There was some white sparks shooting out of the engine and then they informed us of what was going on, that the engine had been shut down and we were returning to Bangkok,” a passenger known only as David said.
It comes as an estimated 60,000 Qantas passengers have been affected by a series of rolling strikes by engineers and ground crews.
The airline last week cancelled 400 domestic flights over the next month, blaming the disruptions on engineers’ strikes.
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