Great Lakes Business Company

The Great Lakes Business Company is an airline owner/operator in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Great Lakes Business Company
IATA ICAO Callsign
HubsKinshasa
Focus citiesKongolo
HeadquartersKinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Key peopleDouglas Mpamo

They are on the List of air carriers banned in the European Union as well as a UN list of businesses targeted by sanctions in regard of the transport of arms and ammunition.[1][2] The company is owned by Douglas Mpamo, according to the UN.[2]

Aircraft

The UN report lists a Boeing 727, an An-12, three An-32 and a Let-410 among GLBC's aircraft they found in Goma.[2]

Accidents and Incidents

26 August 2007 - In Kongolo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 14 of 15 aboard died when an overloaded Antonov An-32B (NATO reporting name "Curl", registration 9Q-CAC) owned by Agefreco Air and operated by the Great Lakes Business Company crashed short of the runway while attempting to return to the airport after experiencing engine problems. The tin trade had become lucrative and violent when the use of lead solder was phased out of electronics for environmental reasons,[3] and the aircraft was overloaded with nine tons of cassiterite (tin ore) and other minerals in addition to its 12 passengers and three-person crew of two Ukrainians and one Russian. The company's licence was suspended on 29 August 2007, along with the airport manager and the Kinshasa director of civil aviation, pending an inquiry.[1][4]

gollark: Perhaps petaHenries, but there's no way to tell.
gollark: Metre-picoHenries but capitalised wrong.
gollark: The force on one car is probably the same because something something change in momentum is constant (and I assume we assume the time is equal).
gollark: The force on what from what?
gollark: I intuitively thought C, but I don't really know enough physics to justify that or any other answer.

References


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