Cameroon Airlines

Cameroon Airlines
IATA
UY
ICAO
UYC
Callsign
CAM-AIR
Founded 1971
Ceased operations 2008
Hubs Douala International Airport
Focus cities Yaoundé Nsimalen International Airport
Headquarters Douala, Cameroon
Website cameroon-airlines.net(archived)

Cameroon Airlines was an airline from Cameroon, serving as flag carrier of the country. Based in Douala, it operated scheduled services within Africa, as well as to Europe and the Middle East out of its hub at Douala International Airport,[1] with a second network focus on Yaoundé Nsimalen International Airport. The company was 96.43 per cent state-owned, with the remaining shares having been held by Air France. It ceased operations in March 2008; its role as Cameroon's flag carrier was taken over by Camair-Co.

History

A Cameroon Airlines Boeing 747-200 approaches Orly Airport in 1989.

Cameroon Airlines was founded on 26 July 1971 in an effort to create a national Cameroonian airline, as until then domestic and international flight operations at the airports in the country were mostly executed by multi-national Air Afrique. Scheduled flights between Douala and Yaoundé were launched on 1 November of that year with an initial fleet of two Boeing 737-200 aircraft. Shortly thereafter, international flights to Rome and Paris commenced using an ex-Air France Boeing 707, which was replaced by a larger and more modern Boeing 747-200 in 1982 (this aircraft remained in service with Cameroon Airlines until 2000, when it was severely damaged in Flight 70, see below).

Over the years, Cameroon Airlines was plagued by financial difficulties, which came along with a poor safety and maintenance record. On 16 September 2005, the airline was indefinitely banned by the French Civil Aviation Authority from operating its prestigious Paris route due to safety concerns which had arisen following aircraft check-ups which had revealed failures to meet international norms in the loading, transport of dangerous materials, navigation documentation and tire maintenance.[2]

In an effort to save the airline from bankruptcy, the Government of Cameroon signed an agreement with SN Airholding, the parent company of Brussels Airlines to ensure the future funding. The plans did not materialize, though. Instead, on 11 September 2006, the launch of Camair-Co as new national airline was announced.[3] Cameroon Airlines stayed operational until March 2008, though flight operations had only taken place during irregular intervals over these last years.

Route network

During the 1970s

At that time, the Cameroon Airlines fleet consisted of two Boeing 737-200 and two Douglas DC-4 aircraft for short haul flights, as well as one Boeing 707-300 for long haul flights to Europe. Scheduled destinations included:[4][5]

Benin
Cameroon
Chad
Congo

Equatorial Guinea
France
Gabon
Italy
  • Rome - Leonardo da Vinci-Fiumicino Airport
Ivory Coast
Nigeria
Senegal
Switzerland

The entrance to the former Cameroon Airlines office in Paris as it appeared in 2010.

During the 1990s

Cameroon Airlines had scaled down the domestic route network in a cost-saving measure, relying on the larger sub-Saharan cities as well as some European destinations:[6]

Belgium
Benin
Cameroon
Chad
Congo
Equatorial Guinea
France

Gabon
Kenya
Nigeria
Saudi Arabia
South Africa
United Kingdom
Zaire
Zimbabwe

A Cameroon Airlines Boeing 737-300 at Charles de Gaulle Airport in 1998.
A Boeing 767-200 of Cameroon Airlines at Charles de Gaulle Airport in 2001.

Fleet

A Boeing 757-200 in 2002, again at Charles de Gaulle Airport, the most important international destination of Cameroon Airlines.
A Boeing 747-300, the largest aircraft to have ever operated by the airline, at Luxembourg Findel Airport in 2003.
A Boeing 767-300 of Cameroon Airlines at Dubai International Airport in 2005.

Over the years, Cameroon Airlines operated the following aircraft types:[7]

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Aircraft Introduced Retired
Boeing 707-300
Boeing 737-200
1971
2006
Boeing 737-300
1996
2005
Boeing 747-200
1981
2000
Boeing 747-300
2001
2004
Boeing 757-200
2002
2008
Boeing 767-200
2001
2008
Boeing 767-300
2000
2008
Bombardier CRJ200
2001
2002
Douglas DC-4
Hawker Siddeley HS 748
Twin Otter

| Embraer 145

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Accidents and incidents

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cameroon Airlines.