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AirAsia Tan Sri Anthony Francis "Tony" Fernandes, CBE (born 30 April 1964)

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In this Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2014 file photo, AirAsia Group CEO Tony Fernandes walks upon arrival to visit the command center of the search operation for the victims of AirAsia Flight 8501 at the airport in Pangkalan Bun. AP




Read more: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/662083...es-lauded-for-crisis-management#ixzz3NoJ411pD
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SURABAYA, Indonesia—If AirAsia bounces back from its first fatal disaster, much of the credit will go to its effusive founder Tony Fernandes and a well-oiled communications machine.

From the highly visible compassion shown by Fernandes to details such as changing the airline’s bright red logo to a somber gray online, experts say the Malaysia-based budget carrier’s initial response to the tragedy is a textbook example of how to communicate in a crisis.

AirAsia Flight QZ8501 crashed into the Java Sea on Sunday with 162 people on board. More than two dozen bodies have been recovered so far. It was the first deadly air accident for the 13-year-old carrier, which has made air travel affordable for tens of millions of people in fast-growing Southeast Asia.

AirAsia’s handling of the disaster has drawn favorable comparisons with the bungled communications by Malaysia Airlines after Flight MH370 disappeared on March 8, 2014. But experts say the situations faced by the two airlines are so different it’s unfair to liken them.

For one, it soon became apparent the AirAsia jet had crashed, while the location of the Malaysia Airlines plane has been a mystery since it vanished a short time into its flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. As a bureaucratic, state-owned company, Malaysia Airlines faced constraints that AirAsia didn’t and which resulted in its often lumbering and scripted communications.

A fatal crash is typically a make-or-break event for an airline. Irrespective of the cause, the professionalism and authenticity of the airline’s response are crucial for its reputation to recover. After nearly a century of commercial aviation, airlines have accumulated a trove of experience and knowledge about how to respond to disasters, though the lessons are not always learned or applied.

“Fernandes sounds authentic and credible,” said Caroline Sapriel, managing director of CS&A, which advises companies on crisis management.

“He is looking after the priorities—the families. He is showing a lot of empathy. He is using many channels to put that across.”

Human factor

Since Sunday, Fernandes has been constantly in the spotlight, apologizing for the loss of life. An active Twitter user with nearly a million followers, he quickly took to social media to express shock and sympathy. On television, he has not shied away from answering questions while avoiding speculation about the cause of the crash, which occurred during bad weather.

“I apologize profusely for what they are going through. I am the leader of this company and I have to take responsibility,” Fernandes said at a televised news conference.

Within hours of the flight disappearing from radar after taking off from Surabaya in Indonesia, he was in the city to meet with families of the passengers and crew. At the same time, the airline and its Indonesian unit in particular were issuing regular statements about the known facts in several languages and had set up a hotline for relatives.

If AirAsia continues in that vein, “it is probably going to prevent a crisis from turning into a reputational train wreck,” Sapriel said.

In the first sign of a backlash from the Indonesian government, the Transport Ministry on Friday grounded AirAsia flights from Surabaya to Singapore, saying the airline did not have a permit to fly on Sundays, the day of the crash. AirAsia said it was reviewing the suspension.

Fernandes “is the boss and everyone knows it,” said Maybank aviation analyst Mohshin Aziz. “The human factor is definitely very genuine, from the words he chooses to the facial expression.”

Swift response

Many family members praised AirAsia for being swift in responding to their needs. The airline was quick to arrange hotel accommodation and transport for those from outside Surabaya.

“AirAsia has taken good care of us from day one,” said Ronny Tanubun, 37, who lost his 13-year-old nephew. “This is a tragedy, what can we do? It’s fated. It can happen to any airline. I am not afraid of flying with AirAsia,” he said at the family crisis center at the Surabaya police headquarters.

Still, others complained the airline didn’t provide useful information during briefings.

“They are not telling us anything about the latest development. We have to find out by watching TV,” said Masykur, 52, who has four family members on the plane.

Even as experts praise AirAsia for its initial handling of the situation, they caution there is a long way to go before it can put the disaster behind it. Its share price is down 8 percent since the crash, wiping nearly $200 million from the airline’s stock market value.

There is likely to be a falloff in passengers from Indonesia, where most of the victims are from. It is an important market for AirAsia, the biggest economy in Southeast Asia and the world’s fourth most populous nation.

The accident investigation report will be of paramount importance for the families of those on board and the airline.

Candor appreciated

If the investigation shows the airline is in some way to blame, it will be crucial for AirAsia to fully acknowledge that and convincingly show it is taking action to ensure that type of accident can never happen again, said Henry Harteveldt, founder of Atmosphere Research.

“AirAsia will find that while it is tough to get the message across, people will appreciate their candor,” he said.

Read more: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/662083...es-lauded-for-crisis-management#ixzz3NoJPBZj1
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Tony-Mahathir-300x246.jpeg








http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Fernandes




Tan Sri Anthony Francis "Tony" Fernandes, CBE (born 30 April 1964) is a Malaysian entrepreneur. He is the founder of Tune Air Sdn. Bhd., who introduced the first budget no-frills airline, AirAsia, to Malaysians with the tagline "Now everyone can fly". Fernandes managed to turn AirAsia, a failing government-linked commercial airline, into a highly successful budget airline public-listed company. He has since founded the Tune Group of companies.

He was also instrumental in lobbying the then-Malaysian Prime Minister, Tun Dr. Mahathir Mohamad in mid-2003, to propose the idea of open skies agreements with neighbouring Thailand, Indonesia, and Singapore. As a result, these nations have granted landing rights to AirAsia and other discount carriers.


As of February 2014, Forbes Asia valued Fernandes' net worth at $650 million, ranking him at number 28 on the Forbes list of Malaysia's Richest.
 
3cb2ae9e8067e68f67f6dbda0f1cb4885e737a83.jpg



AirAsia #QZ8501: Main wreckage of plane found, AirAsia's Surabaya-Singapore flights grounded





The story so far

DAY 7 (Saturday): Four large objects were detected on the sea floor on Saturday – a discovery that signals a breakthrough in the hunt for the wreckage of AirAsia QZ8501.

Search and rescue crew are sending underwater remote-operated vehicles to take underwater pictures of the location where the main wreckage and two large objects were spotted but rough seas are making it difficult.

The biggest piece measures 18 metres long and 5.4 metres wide and appears to be part of the plane’s body, said chief of the National Search and Rescue Agency Henry Bambang Soelistyo.

Indonesian authorities also grounded AirAsia flights from Surabaya to Singapore. Indonesia's Transport Ministry says flight QZ8501 had been flying on an unauthorised schedule when it crashed. Singapore’s Civil Aviation Authority however, said the airline was approved to fly the route daily. Indonesia plans to investigate AirAsia’s flight schedules. Djoko Murdjatmodjo, Indonesia’s acting Director General of Air Transportation said it is possible that AirAsia’s license in Indonesia could be revoked.

Meanwhile, a report by Indonesia’s weather bureau suggests that the formation of ice in storm clouds caused by extreme bad weather may have caused the crash of AirAsia flight QZ8501 in a 14-page report.

Two passengers were identified - Hendra Gunawan Syawal and The Meiji Thejakusuma.
 
Airasiageneric1_reuters.jpg



Doomed AirAsia flight schedule unauthorised: Indonesia


AFPSaturday, Jan 03, 2015

- See more at: http://news.asiaone.com/news/asia/d...e-unauthorised-indonesia#sthash.8qyZsAf3.dpuf



AKARTA -

The AirAsia plane that crashed last weekend was flying on an unauthorised schedule, Indonesia's transport ministry said Saturday, adding it had now frozen the airline's permission to fly the route.

Flight 8501 crashed into the Java Sea with 162 people on board en route from Indonesia's second city Surabaya to Singapore early Sunday, at a flight time that had not been cleared by officials, said director general of air transport Djoko Murjatmodjo.


"It violated the route permit given, the schedule given, that's the problem," he told AFP.

"AirAsia's permit for the route has been frozen because it violated the route permit given." He said the permit would be frozen until investigations were completed.


A statement from transport ministry spokesman J.A. Barata said AirAsia was not permitted to fly the Surabaya-Singapore route on Sundays and had not asked to change its schedule.

Search teams have narrowed their hunt for the plane's fuselage and remaining bodies from the crash of the Airbus A320-200, with foreign investigators helping to pinpoint its black boxes, crucial to determining the cause of the crash off the island of Borneo.

Rough weather has in recent days hampered the search for the plane, which is believed to be in relatively shallow water of around 25-32 metres (82-105 feet). So far 30 bodies and various items of debris have been recovered.

The search is now focused on an area of 45 by 35 nautical miles centred about 75 nautical miles southwest of Pangkalan Bun, a town in Central Kalimantan on Borneo.

The families of victims have been preparing funerals as the bodies recovered are identified in Surabaya, where a crisis centre has been set up at a police hospital with facilities to store 150 bodies.

Before take-off, the pilot of Flight 8501 had asked for permission to fly at a higher altitude to avoid a storm, but the request was not approved due to other planes above him on the popular route, according to AirNav, Indonesia's air traffic control.

In his last communication shortly before all contact was lost, he said he wanted to change course to avoid the menacing storm system.
 


CAAS says approval for Surabaya-S'pore flight based on air deal and available landing slots at Changi



Karamjit KaurThe Straits TimesSaturday, Jan 03, 2015


- See more at: http://news.asiaone.com/news/singap...eement-between-countries#sthash.9BxXQ0gO.dpuf




SINGAPORE - The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) said in response to media queries that approval had been given for the Surabaya-Singapore sector based on the air rights that were available under the air services deal between both countries and available landing slots at Changi Airport.


Get the full story from The Straits Times.

Here is the joint-statement from Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore and Changi Airport Group:

INDONESIA AIRASIA SURABAYA-SINGAPORE SERVICE

In response to media queries, we would like to explain that before an airline can launch a service between two points, it needs to obtain approval of its flight schedules from the respective civil aviation authorities at each end of its flight routing separately.


The airline's application will be considered by each civil aviation authority, taking into account the air traffic rights available under the relevant air services agreements (ASA) and the availability of airport takeoff and landing slots from the respective slot coordinators.

On the Singapore end, Indonesia AirAsia had applied to operate a daily flight between Surabaya and Singapore for the Northern Winter Season from 26 October 2014 to 28 March 2015, arriving at Changi Airport at 8.30am and departing for Surabaya at 2.10pm.

These daily flights were approved as there were available air traffic rights under the bilateral ASA and the slots at Changi Airport were available.

Indonesia AirAsia was operating the flight four times a week on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. Airlines may adjust their flight frequencies in the course of a season in response to market demand or operational requirements.




- See more at: http://news.asiaone.com/news/singap...eement-between-countries#sthash.9BxXQ0gO.dpuf
 
These shitskins are just natural snakes

[video=youtube;BmDumFkOTjo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmDumFkOTjo[/video]
 
CAAS says approval for Surabaya-S'pore flight based on air deal and available landing slots at Changi
The fault clearly lies on the Indonesian themselves lah. The limitation (of flights) was set and mandated by the Indonesian side, but yet they allowed it to be overlooked and bypassed. Under table monies must have played a role here. If this air crash had not happened, then "you happy, I happy" can already lah.

At 1 time when I was in the Surabaya Juanda Airport, I forgot to retrieve my PDA during the security screening. Just within a minute I returned to ask for it, but it was already gone. I asked the security personnels if they have seen it, everyone said NO.
 
The fault clearly lies on the Indonesian themselves lah. The limitation (of flights) was set and mandated by the Indonesian side, but yet they allowed it to be overlooked and bypassed. Under table monies must have played a role here. If this air crash had not happened, then "you happy, I happy" can already lah.

At 1 time when I was in the Surabaya Juanda Airport, I forgot to retrieve my PDA during the security screening. Just within a minute I returned to ask for it, but it was already gone. I asked the security personnels if they have seen it, everyone said NO.



Karma times .
 
These shitskins are just natural snakes



Tony special One "


Fernandes has been awarded the following honours:

Given the titles Tan Sri and Dato' Sri by the King of Malaysia

The Legion of Honour order by the French government[38]

Named Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)

"for services to promote commercial and educational links" between Malaysia and the United Kingdom.[39]





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Fernandes
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Fernandes



On 18 August 2011, just three months after Queens Park Rangers' promotion back to the Premier League following a 15-year absence,

Fernandes was unveiled as their majority shareholder, having bought Bernie Ecclestone's 66% stake.

He was also named as chairman of QPR Holdings Ltd.[27]
 
Tony special One "


Fernandes has been awarded the following honours:

Given the titles Tan Sri and Dato' Sri by the King of Malaysia

The Legion of Honour order by the French government[38]

Named Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE)

"for services to promote commercial and educational links" between Malaysia and the United Kingdom.[39]





http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Fernandes
LOL, soon he'll be knighted the "Sir" title, like the one in Virgin Airlines.
 
The fault clearly lies on the Indonesian themselves lah. The limitation (of flights) was set and mandated by the Indonesian side, but yet they allowed it to be overlooked and bypassed. Under table monies must have played a role here. If this air crash had not happened, then "you happy, I happy" can already lah.

At 1 time when I was in the Surabaya Juanda Airport, I forgot to retrieve my PDA during the security screening. Just within a minute I returned to ask for it, but it was already gone. I asked the security personnels if they have seen it, everyone said NO.

me think the insurance company may have found the "not to pay" loop hole.... :cool:
 
[video=youtube_share;LbxPnq8OZqs]http://youtu.be/LbxPnq8OZqs[/video]
 
How cum the airline CEOs were never on the crashed planes
 
The fault clearly lies on the Indonesian themselves lah. The limitation (of flights) was set and mandated by the Indonesian side, but yet they allowed it to be overlooked and bypassed. Under table monies must have played a role here. If this air crash had not happened, then "you happy, I happy" can already lah.

At 1 time when I was in the Surabaya Juanda Airport, I forgot to retrieve my PDA during the security screening. Just within a minute I returned to ask for it, but it was already gone. I asked the security personnels if they have seen it, everyone said NO.

PAP shit, you like to create story to be inline with the situation to tarnish the airline..pls lah..no matter what..SIA is worst airline of all. Get it? sinkie loser..I will never ever travel in SIA ever..
 
PAP shit, you like to create story to be inline with the situation to tarnish the airline..pls lah..no matter what..SIA is worst airline of all. Get it? sinkie loser..I will never ever travel in SIA ever..
You should have told me earlier. I will sponsor you a ticket on that particular QZ8501 flight. Thereafter, you would have replaced that innocent naked body floating on the Java Sea and you'll also be given free coverage on the front pages of the Indonesian Kompas.

By the way, judging from your posts, you cannot afford to take SIA lah, not even in their Cargo Section. Don't make my toes laugh. Oh I forgot, you share the same Tony as that Keling Shit, but he's at least a "Tan Sri". What's yours?
 
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You should have told me earlier. I will sponsor you a ticket on that particular QZ8501 flight. Thereafter, you would have replaced that innocent naked body floating on the Java Sea and you'll also be given free coverage on the front pages of the Indonesian Kompas.

By the way, judging from your posts, you cannot afford to take SIA lah, not even in their Cargo Section. Don't make my toes laugh. Oh I forgot, you share the same Tony as that Keling Shit, but he's a "Tan Sri". What's yours?

see.. i am right again..PAP shit hard at work here..pls..everyone knows SIA is a shit arline, together with Tiger, scoot and one more budget shit airline (i forget the name) which failed miserably..

By add in fule to tarnish the reputation of other airlines does not make your shit airline looks good..grow up pls.. keep on expressing your 3rd world sinkie behaviour is a total fucking disgrace.
 
see.. i am right again..PAP shit hard at work here..pls..everyone knows SIA is a shit arline, together with Tiger, scoot and one more budget shit airline (i forget the name) which failed miserably..

By add in fule to tarnish the reputation of other airlines does not make your shit airline looks good..grow up pls.. keep on expressing your 3rd world sinkie behaviour is a total fucking disgrace.
Many in this forum have already said that you are brainless. Initially, I still give you the benefit of doubt, but now I truly believe them. Always trying to advocate and incite chaos and riots in Sinkie Land. You try to do that in your Boleh Land and see if Najib's repealed ISA act will put in the Kajang prison for life. You don't even have a chance to fuck your mother by then. Tiu Leh Lou Mou Lah.
 
PAP shit, you like to create story to be inline with the situation to tarnish the airline..pls lah..no matter what..SIA is worst airline of all. Get it? sinkie loser..I will never ever travel in SIA ever..

we know that .. from Woodland to Batu Pahat there is no plane service
 
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