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Oz_TB10
9th Jan 2009, 04:32
Any inside news from the staff? Other than whats been posted by the news websites?

ninemsn.com.au article:
A fire has broken out at a budget airport terminal in Malaysia, forcing the evacuation of all passengers and staff, a senior official with AirAsia says.

"It started 40 minutes ago, there's a lot of smoke. The airport has been evacuated, operations are at a standstill," the official said.

The AirAsia representative said the fire broke out on Friday at a new section of the Low Cost Carrier Terminal (LCCT), which is currently under construction and due to be opened in the next few months.

"Everybody is standing outside the airport," he said, noting that there had been no fire alarm despite people having to be evacuated.

An eyewitness at the scene, 31-year-old businessman Cham Ze Hoe, said at least two fire engines had arrived at the budget terminal.

He said he joined a large crowd of people standing outside the building when he arrived to catch his flight but was prevented from going inside.

"I was stuck in a bus outside the LCCT and I thought it was a traffic jam ... I got down from the bus and walked towards the terminal," he said.

"I could see smoke coming from the LCCT building. There were hundreds of people standing outside."

The LCCT, which opened in 2006, is located 20km from the capital's main facility, the Kuala Lumpur International Airport. It is used by AirAsia as well as Cebu Pacific and Tiger Airways.

AirAsia on Thursday unveiled plans to shift to its own $US460 million ($A645 million) airport outside Kuala Lumpur and abandon the overcrowded LCCT, which it has rapidly outgrown.

The warehouse-style terminal, built at a cost of $US29.2 million ($A40.9 million), was designed to handle 10 million passengers a year.

Credits due ninemsn.com.au

cav-not-ok
9th Jan 2009, 05:13
hmm.. inside job?

can't wait for "labu" aka "klia east" aka "waste of my bloody time and money" can they...?

Oz_TB10
9th Jan 2009, 06:10
Well no injuries so far, thats good news.


Fire at Malaysia's budget terminal triggers evacuation - Regional - MSN Malaysia News - News (http://news.my.msn.com/regional/article.aspx?cp-documentid=2021906)

chintanmanis
9th Jan 2009, 21:08
Aha...good reason to burn it down so a new one in Labu can be built!! KL airports are prone to destruction by fire........remember twice at Subang in the early 90's?
Fat bangla must have thought his wish for a viable LCCT at Labu really came through!

MasMamak
10th Jan 2009, 23:18
Here is something to chew on :

Malaysia's cabinet approves a low-cost air terminal to help out a political ally
By Jed Yoong, Asia Sentinel
With barely three months until March when Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi is due to relinquish his office, he has approved a project that reeks of an attempt to salvage the profitability of conglomerate Sime Darby and to further buoy the country’s budget airline, AirAsia, which is controlled by a Badawi ally, Tony Fernandes.
Over the objections of listed Malaysia Airports Bhd, which operates the current Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang and 38 other airports around the country, and which is also building a new permanent low-cost carrier terminal to replace its current facility, Sime Darby and AirAsia have been given the green light by the government to construct a new terminal in Labu, Negeri Sembilan, (http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=420&I) about 50km from Kuala Lumpur, and 10 km from KL International.
The new airport, “KLIA-East@Labu”, which will be part of Sime’s Negeri Sembilan Vision City, is reportedly estimated to cost RM1.6 bil (US$452 mil), excluding land costs, and will span 2,800 hectares in the home state of Khairy Jamaluddin, Badawi’s controversial son-in-law and a member of parliament. There is no indication whether government or public money will be used indirectly for the project, or who will pay for government facilities including highways and connections to the new airport. AirAsia said in a statement on Jan. 8 that the airline is negotiating with international and domestic investors to fund the construction of the proposed facility.
This hardly the first time that a company has been awarded lucrative contracts under the Barisan Nasional, the ruling coalition that has dominated the country for half a century. It is the kind of crony capitalism that had been practiced for two decades by Badawi’s predecessor, Mahathir Mohamad, and that Badawi had vowed to stamp out when he became prime minister in 2003.
It is also the second major airport project linked to Khairy. Last March, Fajarbaru Builder Group Bhd, formerly known as Syarikat Pembenaan Fajar Baru (Rembau) Sdn Bhd, won a RM124 million contract to expand the current low-budget terminal at Sepang. Wee Choo Keong, a parliamentarian for Kuala Lumpur, pointed out in July in parliament that the company is based in the constituency of "someone's son-in-law” and had no experience in building airports.
When Sepang was completed in 1998, then-Prime Minister Mahathir said the facility was designed to last 100 years and would be able to accommodate 125 million passengers a year. Expansion plans forecast two terminals, four satellites and five runways. The airport company was supposed to have completed an extension to the current low-cost carrier terminal at Sepang 16 months ago. However, only the international arrival hall for low-cost carriers is finished. Fernandes has argued that the terminal won’t be ready for his use before 2014, and is too late to keep up with the airline’s passenger growth.
Bernama, the national news agency, reported on January 8 that Fernandes said that “in two years' time, this airline will go bust if we do not have the facility” and that “the key thing is we cannot slow down our growth because we have bought planes.” AirAsia’s third quarter results in September marked core operating losses of RM76 million, mainly due to a fuel hedging policy which gambled that crude oil would hover around US$70 per barrel. Crude is now lingering around US$40 per barrel.
AirAsia has cited the inability of the existing LCCT’s 10 million passengers per year capacity to meet demand as a reason for building the new airport. Passenger traffic was expected to grow by 25 percent by the end of 2008, from 15 million to 19 million, and forecast to grow at the same rate this year, Fernandes told local media. The current low-cost terminal’s increased capacity after expansion to 15 million passengers per year falls short of AirAsia’s requirements, Transport Minister Ong Tee Keat told local media.
After construction, Sime will pass the “whole project including the land” to AirAsia. It’s unclear who will operate the airport and how much additional government funds will be required to operate the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine departments at the airport, among other things.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.asiasentinel.com (http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1658&Itemid=178&limit=1&limitstart=1)