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Old 21st November 2001 | 10:37
  #30 (permalink)  
sirwa69
 
Joined: Sep 2000
Posts: 313
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From: Bahrain
Talking

This thread is obviously a load of old toot.
Here is the true story from today's GDN (so it must be true)
Airline flies high on new demand


By SOMAN BABY


GULF AIR is laying on dozens of extra flights to meet soaring regional demand, despite the global slump.

It is beefing up services to Jeddah and high-demand regional stations like Cairo and Beirut, it was revealed yesterday. Thirty extra flights between Jeddah and the airline's four Gulf stations are planned between tomorrow and December 31, for the Umra pilgrimage, commercial and customer services vice-president Adel Ali said.

"Besides increased capacity for Umra, we shall operate additional flights to regional markets like Beirut and Cairo for Eid, Christmas and New Year holidays," he told the GDN.

"The decision has been taken in view of the increased demand. There has been a shift in the tourist movement.

"People who used to go to Europe and the US for tourism purposes are now shifting their destinations to places of interest in our own region. Gulf Air is committed to catering to this new demand."

The global slump following the September 11 attacks in the US will continue during the first half of 2002, but the worst is over, said Mr Ali.

"We have already seen the worst, and it can now only go better. We are very optimistic that businesses will pick up and go back to the pre-crisis level during the second half of next year," he said.

Gulf Air's present fleet of 30 aircraft will drop to 26 by next year and the airline last month announced global plans to shed 400 to 450 jobs by the end of the year.

"The recent staff redundancy programme was an adjustment in the number of cabin crew required for revised business," said Mr Ali.

"This was also a reflection of the reduced frequency to certain stations, where there was an over-capacity.

"We shall continue to review all our routes. It may not be possible to sustain those routes with heavy losses."

Mr Ali said Gulf Air would continue to examine the cost reduction opportunities in all areas possible.

"More than 150 staff have already benefited from an early retirement programme which was implemented in co-ordination with the Labour and Social Affairs Ministry," he revealed.

"Our cost reduction exercise will not, however, be at the expense of safety and security.

"We will always look at what the customer needs and implement those projects which are commercially viable."
Hooray, Can I have my job back now?
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