Ariana Afghan Airlines
Ariana Afghan Airlines Co. Ltd., also known simply as Ariana, is the largest airline of Afghanistan and serves as the country's national carrier. Founded in 1955, Ariana is the oldest airline of Afghanistan. The company has its main base at Kabul International Airport, from where it operates domestically, and also provides international connections that link Afghanistan with India, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. The carrier is headquartered in Shāre Naw, Kabul, and it is wholly owned by the Afghan government. Ariana Afghan Airlines has been on the list of air carriers banned in the European Union.
History
Early years
The airline was set up on 27 January 1955. It was established as Aryana Airlines with the assistance of Indamer Co. Ltd., which initially held a 49% interest, and the government of Afghanistan owned the balance. At the beginning, services were operated to Bahrain, India, Iran, and Lebanon, with a fleet of three Douglas DC-3s. In 1957, Pan American World Airways became the minor shareholder of the airline when it took over the 49% interest from Indamer. Domestic scheduled services started the same year. By, a fleet of three DC-3s was being used for linking Kabul with Amritsar, Delhi, Jeddah, and Karachi, as well as with some points within Afghanistan, while a single DC-4 operated the Kabul–Kandahar–Tehran–Damascus–Beirut–Ankara–Prague–Frankfurt service, so-called "Marco Polo" route. In the early 1960s, from US aid to Afghanistan was used to capitalise the company.By, the airline had 650 employees. At this time, the fleet comprised one Boeing 727-100C, one CV-440, one DC-3 and two Douglas DC-6s that worked on routes serving the Middle East, India, Pakistan, the USSR, and Istanbul, Frankfurt and London. Domestic services were then operated by Bakhtar Alwatana, which was established by the government in 1967 for this purpose.
The carrier's first widebody aircraft, a McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30, entered the fleet in early. By, the aircraft fleet consisted of the DC-10 and two Boeing 727-100Cs. In the mid-1980s, during the Soviet–Afghan War, the carrier was forced to sell the DC-10 to British Caledonian, as the Soviets wanted the carrier to fly the Tupolev Tu-154 as a replacement. In, Ariana was taken over by Bakhtar Afghan Airlines, which became the country's new national airline. In 1986, Bakhtar ordered two Tupolev Tu-154Ms; the airline took possession of these aircraft in. In, Bakhtar was merged back into Ariana, thus creating an airline which could serve both short and long haul routes.
Taliban era
After the end of the Soviet war in 1989 and collapse of Najibullah's government, the Taliban took over Kabul in 1996. Afghanistan faced substantial economic sanctions from the international sector during the Taliban regime. The sanctions, along with the Taliban government's control of the company and the grounding of many of the carrier's international flights, had a devastating effect on the economic health of the company through the 1990s. The fleet was reduced to only a handful of Russian and Ukrainian built An-26s, Yakovlev Yak-40s and three Boeing 727s, which were used on the longest domestic routes. In October 1996, Pakistan provided a temporary maintenance and operational base at Karachi. With no overseas assets, by 1999 Ariana's international operations consisted of flights to Dubai only; also, limited cargo flights continued into China's western provinces. However, sanctions imposed by UN Security Council Resolution 1267 forced the airline to suspend overseas operations. In, Ariana was grounded completely.According to the Los Angeles Times:
According to people interviewed by the Los Angeles Times, Viktor Bout's companies helped in running the airline.
Post-Taliban era
Following the overthrow of the Taliban government during Operation Enduring Freedom, Ariana began to rebuild its operations in. About a month later, the UN sanctions were finally lifted, permitting the airline to resume international routes again. In 2002, the government of India gave the carrier a gift of three ex-Air India Airbus A300s. Ariana's first international passenger flight since 1999 landed at Indira Gandhi International Airport in, followed by routes to Pakistan and Germany in and the same year, respectively. In 2005, India signed an agreement on aviation cooperation with Afghanistan, with Air India training 50 officials for Ariana.EU ban
Due to safety regulations, Ariana was mostly banned from flying into European Union airspace in, with the European Commission allowing the carrier to fly only a single France-registered Airbus A310 into the member states; the ban was extended to the entire fleet in October of that year. The ban was confirmed in subsequent updates of the list released in late 2009 and. In, all Afghanistan-registered aircraft were banned from operating in the European Union. Ariana was still included in subsequent updates of the list, released in,,,,,,,, June 2016, and December 2016.Destinations
, Ariana Afghan Airlines serves three domestic and seven international destinations in Russia, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and India; most of the routes radiate from Kabul.Fleet
Current fleet
the Ariana Afghan Airlines fleet consists of the following aircraft:Historical fleet
Ariana operated the following equipment all through its history:- Airbus A300B4
- Airbus A310-200
- Airbus A320-200
- Airbus A321-100
- Antonov An-12BP
- Antonov An-12T
- Antonov An-24
- Antonov An-24B
- Antonov An-24RV
- Antonov An-26
- Antonov An-26B
- Boeing 707-120B
- Boeing 707-320C
- Boeing 720B
- Boeing 727-100C
- Boeing 727-200
- Boeing 727-200F
- Boeing 737-300
- Boeing 737-800
- Boeing 747-200B
- Boeing 757-200
- Convair CV-440
- Douglas C-47
- Douglas C-47A
- Douglas C-54B
- Douglas C-54G
- Douglas DC-4
- Douglas DC-6A
- McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30
- Tupolev Tu-134
- Tupolev Tu-154B
- Tupolev Tu-154M
- Yakovlev Yak-40
Accidents and incidents
Date | Location | Aircraft | Tail number | Aircraft damage | Fatalities | Description | Refs |
2 11 1959 | YA-AAD | W/O | |||||
21 11 1959 | DC-4 | YA-BAG | W/O | 24/27 | Crashed shortly after takeoff from Beirut International Airport, during initial climbout. The aircraft was due to operate the second leg of an international scheduled Frankfurt–Beirut–Tehran–Kandahar–Kabul passenger service as Flight 202. | ||
5 1 1969 | London | Boeing 727-100C | YA-FAR | W/O | 50 | Crashed on approach to London Gatwick Airport when attempting to land in dense fog as it descended below the glideslope. Forty-eight people were killed on the plane, as well as two on the ground. The aircraft was completing an international scheduled Kabul–Kandahar–Beirut–Istanbul–Frankfurt–London passenger service as Flight 701. | |
15 1 1969 | Kabul | YA-BAD | W/O | Ground collision. | |||
10 12 1988 | An-26 | W/O | 25/25 | The aircraft was shot down by Pakistani fighters when it was flying a domestic Khost–Kabul passenger service. | |||
18 6 1989 | Zabol | An-26 | YA-BAK | W/O | 6/39 | Crashed into a hill when attempting to land at Zabol Airport following an in-flight opening of the ramp door. The aircraft was operating a domestic scheduled Kabul–Zaranj passenger service. | |
1 8 1992 | Kabul | Tu-154M | YA-TAP | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed by a rocket while sitting at Kabul Airport. | |
28 8 1992 | Kabul | An-26 | YA-BAN | W/O | Destroyed by a rocket while sitting at Kabul Airport. | ||
11 9 1995 | Jalalabad | YA-BAO | W/O | 3/46 | The aircraft was completing a domestic scheduled Kabul–Jalalabad passenger service when it apparently ran out of fuel, crashing on approach to Jalalabad Airport. | ||
29 10 1997 | Jalalabad | YA-KAE | W/O | 1 | Crashed on landing at Jalalabad Airport. | ||
19 3 1998 | YA-FAZ | W/O | 45/45 | Crashed in bad weather into mountainous terrain on approach to Kabul Airport. It was completing the last leg of an international non-scheduled Sharjah–Kabul–Kandahar passenger service. | |||
Kabul | An-12B | YA-DAA | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed during a U.S. bombing raid. | ||
Kabul | An-12BK | YA-DAB | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed during a U.S. bombing raid. | ||
Kabul | An-24 | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed during a U.S. bombing raid. | |||
Kabul | An-24B | YA-DAH | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed during a U.S. bombing raid. | ||
Kabul | An-24RV | YA-DAJ | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed during a U.S. bombing raid. | ||
Kabul | YA-FAU | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed during a U.S. bombing raid. | |||
Kabul | Boeing 727-100C | YA-FAW | W/O | 0/0 | Destroyed during a U.S. bombing raid. | ||
23 3 2007 | Istanbul | YA-BAD | W/O | 0 | Overran the runway on landing at Istanbul Atatürk Airport. | ||
08 5 2014 | Kabul | YA-PIB | W/O | 0 | Slid off the runway on landing at Kabul Airport. |