Kabo Air

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Kabo Air
IATA
N9
ICAO
QNK
Callsign
KABO
Founded 1980
Hubs Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport
Fleet size 3
Destinations
Company slogan His children are the company's future
Parent company Kabo Air Travels Ltd
Headquarters Kano, Nigeria
Key people Late Alhaji Dankabo (Founder)
Captain Saidu Mohammed (MD/CEO)
Website www.kaboair.com

Kabo Air is an airline headquartered in Kano, Kano State, Nigeria.[1] It originally operated special charter services for corporate bodies, executives and government officials. However, in 2009 the airline received approval to start international scheduled services. The airline operated scheduled flights from Kano to Abuja, Dubai and Jeddah for a short period. Its main base is Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport.[2]

History

The airline was established in February 1980 by Dr. Alhaji Muhammadu Adamu Dankabo and started operations in April 1981.[3] It is wholly owned by Kabo Holdings. The company stopped operating domestic services in 2001, but recently said that new services are on the table. For now, they focus solely on Hajj flights and international charters. Traffic rights were given to Kabo Air for operating scheduled services to Rome, Nairobi and N'Djamena, but have not been used so far. For some time there were flights to Cairo.

Kabo Air met the requirements set by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) for re-capitalization in May 2007.[4]

Destinations

Kabo Air operates no scheduled operations as of November 2011.

Fleet

As of October 2013 the Kabo Air fleet consists of the following aircraft:[5]

Kabo Air Fleet
Aircraft In Fleet Notes
Boeing 747–200 3
Boeing 747–400 1
Total 4

Incidents and accidents

Kabo Air has had the following incidents and accidents since commencing operations:

  • On 6 August 1986, a Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle III overran the runway at Calabar Airport, Nigeria. All passengers and crew survived but the aircraft was written off.[6]
  • On 16 September 1991, a BAC 1-11 landed at Port Harcourt Airport, Nigeria without lowering its gear. All passengers and crew survived but the aircraft was written off.[7]
  • In 1992, a 707 made an emergency landing in Istres Air Base following a fire caused by overloading.
  • On 23 August 1992, a BAC 1–11 overran the runway at Sokoto Airport, Nigeria. None of the 53 passengers and 4 crew were killed but the aircraft was written off.[8]
  • On 12 January 2010, a Middle East Airlines Airbus A330 collided with a parked Kabo Air Boeing 747 while taxiing to its arrival gate at Kano International Airport, Nigeria; none of the passengers or crew were injured. The Boeing 747's left wing and main fuel tank were badly damaged and the right wing of the Airbus A330 was damaged. Officials believe the accident could have been avoided if there was more ground lighting to help the pilots of the Airbus A330 to see.[9]
  • On 4 October 2013, A Boeing 747-200 registration 5N-JRM performing Hajj flight NR-1245 from Kano to Sokoto (Nigeria) and on to Jeddah (Saudi Arabia) with 494 passengers and 18 crew, was cleared to land on Sokoto's runway 08 but landed on opposite runway 26 at about 21:00L. The aircraft hit the localizer antenna for runway 08, touched down and rolled out coming to a stop with a number of body gear tires burst. No injuries occurred, the aircraft sustained minor damage.

References

  1. "Contact Us." Kabo Air. Retrieved on 27 November 2010. "HEAD OFFICE 67/73 Ashton Rd P.O.Box 1850 Kano State Nigeria"
  2. "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-04-03. p. 99. 
  3. Kabo Air – History
  4. All Africa.com 5 May 2007
  5. Aerotransport.org 2011 World Airline census retrieved 26 April 2011
  6. Kabo Air SE-210 overrun report
  7. 16 Sept '91 incident
  8. BAC 1–11 overrun report
  9. Kabo Air and MEA jet collide

External links

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