Fly-SAX

Fly-SAX
IATA ICAO Callsign
B5 [1] EXZ [1] DUMA
Hubs Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, Wilson Airport
Focus cities Local and regional
Fleet size 6
Destinations 14
Company slogan Connecting Kenya
Parent company Fly540
Headquarters Wilson Airport, Nairobi, Kenya
Key people

Don Smith (CEO and Founder)

Charles Wako (Chairman)
Website fly-sax.com

East African Safari Air Express Ltd trading as Fly-SAX is a Kenyan airline based at Wilson Airport in Nairobi.[2] Originally East African Safari Air, the airline was rebranded as Fly-SAX after its purchase by the parent company of Kenyan airline Fly540,[1] and it now claims to be Kenya’s premier safari and private charter airline.

History

Before its current iteration, the airline began operations as East African Safari Air Limited, founded by Anthony A. Kegode and incorporated in May 1989. The company later changed the name of its airline operations to East African Safari Air Express.

In September 2004, East African Safari Air Express was placed into receivership. At that time, the airline was transporting an estimated 25,000 passengers per month on their various routes. East African Safari Air Express emerged from receivership and operated scheduled regional and domestic services with a fleet of McDonnell-Douglas DC-9s and a Fokker F28 that once belonged to competing Kenyan airline JetLink Express.[3]

In November 2010, the airline was grounded in a dispute over payment of airline leases.[4] In December 2010, low-cost carrier Fly540 purchased the assets of East African Safari Air Express,[5] and the operation was re-branded as Fly-SAX (an ode to its former Safari Air Express moniker) in September 2012. The airline carried over the same IATA (B5) and ICAO (EXZ) airline codes to the new brand.[6]

In April 2013, Fly540 signed an acquisition agreement with Tanzanian airline Fastjet that would see Fastjet assume Fly540's operations in order to establish Fastjet service in Kenya.[7] This purchase leaves it unclear whether or not Fly-SAX will continue as a separate entity, as Fastjet staff have indicated that the Fly540 brand will eventually be phased out.[8]

Destinations

As of January 2016, Fly-SAX flies to the following destinations:

Country City/County Airport Notes Refs
Comoros Moroni Prince Said Ibrahim International Airport
Kenya Baringo County Lake Baringo Airport
Kenya Kitale Kitale Airport
Kenya Kwale County Ukunda Airport
Kenya Lamu Manda Airport
Kenya Lodwar Lodwar Airport
Kenya Malindi Malindi Airport
Kenya Mombasa Moi International Airport
Kenya Nairobi Jomo Kenyatta International Airport [Hub]
Kenya Nairobi Wilson Airport [Hub]
Kenya Narok County Mara Serena Airport
Kenya Wajir Wajir Airport
Somalia Mogadishu Aden Adde International Airport
Uganda Entebbe Entebbe International Airport

Fleet

The Fly-SAX fleet consists of the following aircraft (as of August 2016):[9]

Fly-SAX Fleet
Aircraft In Fleet Orders Passengers
C Y Total
Bombardier CRJ100ER 1 50 50
Bombardier Dash 8-100 1
Douglas DC-9-10 2 80 80
Fokker F28 Fellowship 4000 1 67 67
McDonnell Douglas MD-83 1
Total 6

The airline previously operated the following aircraft (as of June 2015):[10]


References

  1. 1 2 3 "Airline Information – Fly SAX". Retrieved 6 August 2013.
  2. "Fly-SAX – About Us". 1 February 2013. Retrieved 6 August 2013.
  3. "Photo Search Results". airliners.net.
  4. Paul Argyle. "Fly540 of Kenya, has bought rival East African Safari Express - News - alternativeairlines.com". alternativeairlines.com.
  5. "Kenya Aviation News Fly 540 takes over East African Safari Air Express - eTurboNews.com". eturbonews.com.
  6. "Airline Profiles - ch-aviation.com". ch-aviation. horizontal tab character in |title= at position 20 (help)
  7. "Error 404". CNBCAfrica.com.
  8. "FastJet eyes late summer launch alongside Fly540 brand". Flightglobal.com.
  9. "Global Airline Guide 2016 (Part One)". Airliner World (October 2016): 19.
  10. "Fly-SAX – Kenya’s premier safari and private charter airline". fly-sax.com.
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