Channelnewsasia.com
Thursday, December 04, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Mumbai Attacks
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Business News

 
 

Visa rule could scupper AirAsia X flights to Japan
Posted: 27 July 2008 1617 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

KUALA LUMPUR: Long-haul budget airline AirAsia X is likely to drop plans to fly to Japan next year, despite several airports having welcomed it, due to tough visa rules, a top official has said.

"Give me a chance now and I'd rather fly to Korea, the Middle East and India... Other countries are competing for Malaysian tourists," AirAsia X chief executive officer, Azran Osman-Rani, told AFP in a weekend interview.

"To get a Japanese visa, a Malaysian has to visit the embassy in Kuala Lumpur twice and even then, the person is not sure a visa will be issued," he said.

The Australian-based Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation (CAPA) said recently that Japan's highly restrictive visa system virtually rules out Malaysia-based AirAsia X from starting a service in 2009 as it had planned.

CAPA said Japan would have to remove the visa restrictions – which are highly inconvenient to travellers with non-refundable low-cost tickets – to make it attractive to regional budget carriers.

Azran said that when he visited airports in Japan this month, the operators were eager to accept AirAsia X flights, to compensate as full-service carriers like Qantas cut back their frequencies.

"I am looking at all airports except Narita due to congestion and high costs," he said, adding AirAsia X was keen to fly to Japan as a wealthy country with a huge population.

If Japanese authorities were to come up with a good proposal, "I will change my plan," he said.

An affiliate of regional low-cost carrier AirAsia and Virgin Group, AirAsia X was launched in January 2007. AirAsia and AirAsia X share common shareholders, including AirAsia founder and CEO Tony Fernandes.

Richard Branson's Virgin Group has taken a 20 percent stake in the airline and the British billionaire has vowed to ensure that the project turns a profit.

Azran said the carrier would take delivery of two brand new A330-300 by year end. It has signed a deal with Airbus to buy 25 A330-300 aircraft.

AirAsia X now has one A330-300 aircraft. It currently mounts a four-weekly return flight to Australia's Gold Coast which began in November last year and also flies to China's Hangzhou.

It plans to offer six return flights per week between Perth and Kuala Lumpur starting November 2.

But Azran declined to confirm if AirAsia would be able to carry out its plan to fly to Britain – either London or Manchester – by year-end.

"I am still looking at it," he said.


- AFP/so

 

 



Other business News
US economy weakened further in November, says Beige Book
US private sector loses 250,000 jobs in November
Wall Street rallies on hopeful spending, housing reports
UAW will make concessions to save automakers, says union president
EU targets Chinese soy imports in new melamine scare
Lufthansa bids up to US$475m for Austrian Airlines
Queen's Speech stresses Britain's focus on economy
Argentine lawmakers agree to seize back Aerolineas
US dollar stable against euro, yen amid grim data
Oil prices soften on demand jitters
CIC says China should not be counted on to ease global economic crisis
German bank BayernLB posts Q3 loss of one billion euros
Prospects brighten for US auto rescue, sparking cautious relief
China sees fall in foreign tourists this year
Asian shares rebound on heels of Wall Street
China sees fall in foreign tourists this year
Australia's economic growth slows
China's sovereign wealth fund to avoid western financial firms
Telecom Italia says it will cut 4,000 jobs in Italy
Vietnam announces billion-dollar economic stimulus
Qantas will remain Aussie, despite BA merger talk, says treasurer
US auto sales collapse amid economic crisis
GM to slash 31,500 jobs, asks for up to US$18b in loans
Global financial crisis to dominate US-China Strategic Economic Dialogue

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions