PMTair
PMTair (Progress MulTi Air) was a Cambodian airline offering regularly scheduled domestic and international passenger and cargo services out of Phnom Penh International Airport.
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Founded | 2003 | ||||||
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Ceased operations | 2008 | ||||||
Hubs | Phnom Penh International Airport | ||||||
Secondary hubs | Angkor International Airport | ||||||
Fleet size | 7 | ||||||
Destinations | 4 (at closure) | ||||||
Parent company | Progress Multitrade Co., Ltd. | ||||||
Headquarters | Phnom Penh, Cambodia | ||||||
Website | www.pmtair.com |
History
PMTair was founded on 14 January 2003 and was owned by Progress Multitrade Co., Ltd. A certificate of airworthiness was issued by the Cambodian Civil Aviation Authority on October 14, 2003.
The airline was dissolved in 2008,[1]
Destinations
Upon closure, PMTair served the following destinations:[2]
- Cambodia
- Siem Reap - Angkor International Airport base
- Korea, South
- Vietnam
Former routes
PMTair suspended all domestic flights in the wake of the crash of PMTair Flight U4 241.
- Pattaya-Siem Reap
- Bangkok-Phnom Penh
- Hanoi-Phnom Penh
- Phnom Penh-Ratanakiri-Siem Reap
- Ratanakiri-Phnom Penh
- Siem Reap-Phnom Penh
- Siem Reap-Sihanoukville
Fleet
The PMTair fleet included the following aircraft (as of 30 August 2008):[3]
- 2 Antonov An-12 (cargo)
- 1 Antonov An-24
- 2 Boeing 737-200
- 2 McDonnell Douglas MD-83 (one aircraft is operated for Wind Rose Aviation)
Accidents and incidents
- On November 21, 2005, a Yunshuji Y7-100C operated by PMTair left the runway when landing at Ban Lung, Ratanakiri and sheared a leg off its landing gear. Fifty-nine passengers and six crewmembers were aboard. There were no injuries. The aircraft was XU-072, leased from Royal Phnom Penh Airways, and formerly operated by President Airlines.[4] As a result of this accident, United Nations personnel were barred from using the airline.[5]
- On June 25, 2007, PMTair Flight U4 241, an Antonov An-24 with 16 passengers and six crew crashed in a mountainous jungle area of Kampot Province. The flight had departed Angkor International Airport and was heading for Sihanoukville International Airport, and disappeared from radar at around 10:40 a.m. local time (0340 UTC). Aboard were 13 South Koreans and three Czech passengers, and the crew of one Uzbekistani pilot and five Cambodians. Because of weather and rugged terrain, search-and-rescue crews took two days to find the crash site. No survivors were found.[6][7][8]
gollark: PRs welcome*!\* not at all welcome
gollark: Ah, but that's the *user's* problem.
gollark: Minoteaur 8 is a blazingly concurrent™, actually quite fast™ Rust application using the slightly concurrent, very slow™ web platform for all UI stuff.
gollark: I guess I can just have revision history and make it take the latest one.
gollark: But webapps can work offline nowadays anyway, and it would be easier to maintain one implementation than two.
References
- World Airline Directory Archived 2010-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
- PMTair - Cambodian airlines: FLIGHT SCHEDULE Archived 2008-05-14 at the Wayback Machine
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-02-10. Retrieved 2008-01-18.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Accidents and Incidents, Air Safety Week, 2005-12-12 (retrieved 2007-06-25).
- De Launey, Guy (2006-02-06). "Budget flights arrive in Southeast Asia", BBC News Online, retrieved 2007-06-25.
- Agence France-Presse (2007-06-25). Charter plane carrying Koreans, Czechs crashes in Cambodia, Channel NewsAsia, retrieved 2007-06-25.
- "'No survivors' in Cambodia plane". BBC News. 2007-06-27. Retrieved 2007-06-26.
- "Memorials held for Cambodian air crash victims". Channel NewsAsia. 2007-06-28. Archived from the original on 2007-06-30. Retrieved 2007-06-28.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to PMTair. |
- Official Website (Archive)
- PMTair Fleet
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