AIR ZIMBABWE is on the brink of replenishing its fleet amid
indications that the national airliner would take delivery of an Embraer ERJ
145 tentatively in the next two weeks.
It has also emerged that the delivery of two Boeing 777-200
ERs acquired from Malaysia is now imminent.
Government plans to revive the flag carrier as part of
broad efforts to spur economic growth.
A source in the Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure
Development, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told The Sunday Mail Business
last week that they expect the Embraer to be delivered in two weeks’ time.
While the Embraer was paid for in full, delays were
occasioned by the need to settle funds for flight logistics.
“The issue is that the two weeks window within which we
expected its arrival is still within reach or range. But the guys up there (in
the United States) were just awaiting confirmation of their relevant deposit,
which is to do with the flight logistics.
“They have even established a route that they (will) take,
the stop-checks that they would take up to the time they arrive in the country.
So, it’s an issue, I think, which is quite advanced in terms of progression and
we are quite happy about.”
Instructively, Air Zimbabwe ran newspaper adverts last week
seeking tenders from “competent and reputable” firms registered with the
Procurement Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (PRAZ) and the Insurance and
Pensions Commission (IPEC) for the provision of insurance cover for its
aeroplanes.
Transport and Infrastructure Development Deputy Minister
Fortune Chasi referred all questions to Minister Joel Matiza, who could not be
reached by the time of going to print.
However, Finance and Economic Development Minister
Professor Mthuli Ncube told The Sunday Mail Business in a wide-ranging
interview that Government was determined to revive the airline.
“We are basically involved in the financing of the
acquisition of the aircraft. We are making the various payments towards that
and I hope that we will be able to receive the aircraft soon, starting with the
Embraer from the United States and then followed by the aircraft from Malaysia
that we already own, by the way,” said Prof Ncube.
“We have already paid for (the two aircraft from Malaysia),
it’s just a matter of bringing them home and then trying to get them to work,
one way or the other.
“So we are working on this. I think Zimbabwe needs to
revive its own airline because every other airline is flying into Zimbabwe now
and they are all advertising the Victoria Falls.”
Prof Ncube said while allowing other airlines into the
country’s airspace in line with the Yamoussoukro Declaration of 1988 “is okay”
for tourism, the move doesn’t help the national airline.
“We want more airlines but we also want to be in the
market,” said Prof Ncube.
The Yamoussoukro Declaration, which came into force in
2000, opens up air traffic rights through a simple notification procedure.The
Embraer, Prof Ncube said, would be instrumental in servicing Air Zimbabwe’s
domestic routes.
“If you look at the domestic market, for example, we just
need the appropriate aircraft. Air Zimbabwe doesn’t have appropriate aircraft
for the domestic market, it uses big aircraft which is wrong aircraft for
flying between here (Harare) and Bulawayo, Harare-Vic Falls. We need the
smaller ones, and that is what the Embraer will do. So, we are keen on this and
I think that we will get somewhere with the relaunch of the airline,” he said.
Embraer SA is a Brazilian aerospace conglomerate that
produces commercial, military, executive and agricultural aircraft and provides
aeronautical services.
Its headquarters are in São José dos Campos, São Paulo, and
is the third-largest producer of civil aircraft after Boeing and Airbus.
The new revelations put paid to market rumour that the
planes that were recently acquired from Malaysia had been sold for a song.
Government paid US$41 million for two B777s and one of them
was commissioned in Harare in April last year, but in November, there were
indications that Jet Midwest, a US-based global aviation parts provider, had
bought one of them. Sunday Mail
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