Kabo Air

(Redirected from QNK)

Kabo Air is a Nigerian charter airline headquartered in Kano, Kano State[2] and based at Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport.[3]

Kabo Air
IATA ICAO Call sign
N9[1] QNK[1] KABO[1]
Founded1980
Ceased operations2016(from commercial passenger services)
HubsMallam Aminu Kano International Airport
Fleet size2
Parent companyKabo Holdings[1]
HeadquartersKano, Nigeria
Key peopleSaidu Mohammed, Managing director[1]
Websitewww.flykabo.com

History

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A former Kabo Air Sud Aviation Caravelle in 1985

Kabo Air was established in February 1980 by Dr. Alhaji Muhammadu Adamu Dankabo and started operations in April 1981.[4][1] It is currently wholly owned by Kabo Holdings.[1]

Kabo Air originally operated special charter services for corporate bodies, executives, and government officials. The company stopped operating domestic services in 2001 when they focus solely on Hajj flights and international charters. However, in 2009 the airline received approval to start international scheduled services. Traffic rights were given to Kabo Air for operating scheduled services to Rome, Nairobi and N'Djamena, but have not been used. The airline operated scheduled flights from Kano to Abuja, Cairo, Dubai and Jeddah for a short period.[5]

Kabo Air met the requirements set by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) for re-capitalization in May 2007.[6]

On 3 March 2017, the offices of Kabo Air were sealed by the Nigerian Federal Inland Revenue Service due to unpaid tax liabilities.[7] It has been reported that Kabo Air owes over 149 million Nigerian naira (approx. US-$460,000) in taxes.[8]

Destinations

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As of March 2017, Kabo Air did not operate any scheduled services and focused on charter operations only, especially for pilgrim flights under its own name and on behalf of other airlines.

Fleet

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A now retired Kabo Air Boeing 747-200 in 2012

Current fleet

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As of August 2019, the Kabo Air fleet consists of the following aircraft:[9]

Aircraft In Service Orders Notes
Boeing 747-200 1 _ Aircraft stored. Only passenger operator of this variant.
Boeing 747-400 1 _
Total 2 _

Former fleet

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The Kabo Air fleet previously included the following aircraft:

Incidents and accidents

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  • On 6 August 1986, a Sud Aviation SE-210 Caravelle III overran the runway at Calabar Airport, Nigeria. Passengers and crew survived but the aircraft was written off.[10]
  • On 16 September 1991, a BAC 1-11 landed at Port Harcourt Airport, Nigeria without lowering its gear. All passengers and crew survived but the aircraft was written off.[11]
  • On March 31 1992, Flight 671, operated by Trans-Air Service as a Kabo Air flight, lost two engines on the right wing in flight. The Boeing 707 made a successful emergency landing at Istres-Le Tubé Air Base and all aboard survived.[12]
  • On 23 August 1992, a BAC 1–11 overran the runway at Sokoto Airport, Nigeria. None of the 53 passengers and 4 crew were killed but the aircraft was written off.[13]
  • On 12 January 2010, a Middle East Airlines Airbus A330 collided with a parked Kabo Air Boeing 747 while taxiing to its arrival gate at Kano International Airport, Nigeria; none of the passengers or crew were injured. The Boeing 747 left-wing and main fuel tank were badly damaged and the right-wing of the Airbus A330 was damaged. Officials believe the accident could have been avoided if there was more ground lighting to help the pilots of the Airbus A330 to see.[14]
  • In September 2013, a Kabo Air Boeing 747-200 operated on a Hajj charter on behalf of Biman Bangladesh Airlines was refused to receive permission to land in Saudi Arabia as the aircraft at age 21 violated the country's guidelines for aircraft to be a maximum 20 years old to be operated into Saudi Arabia. Biman Bangladesh claimed that Kabo Air did give wrong information regarding the plane age.[15]
  • On 4 October 2013, a Kabo Air Boeing 747-200 on a Hajj charter flight from Kano via Sokoto to Jeddah was cleared to land on Sokoto's runway 08. However, the aircraft continued to land on the opposite runway 26 for unknown reasons. The aircraft came in too low and hit parts of the ILS before coming to stop with some burst tyres. The Nigerian aviation authorities rated this incident as serious and started investigations on why the crew chose the wrong runway.[16]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g airlineupdate.com - Kabo Air[permanent dead link] retrieved 17 March 2017
  2. ^ "Contact Us." Kabo Air. Retrieved on 27 November 2010. "HEAD OFFICE 67/73 Ashton Rd P.O.Box 1850 Kano State Nigeria"
  3. ^ "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International. 2007-04-03. p. 99.
  4. ^ Kabo Air – History
  5. ^ "Kabo Air Airline Profile | CAPA". centreforaviation.com. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  6. ^ All Africa.com 5 May 2007
  7. ^ ch-aviation.com 3 March 2017
  8. ^ premiumtimesng.com - FIRS Seals Kabo Airlines, Others Over N200 million Tax Liabilities 27 February 2017
  9. ^ "Global Airline Guide 2019 (Part One)". Airliner World (October 2019): 22.
  10. ^ Kabo Air SE-210 overrun report
  11. ^ 16 Sept '91 incident
  12. ^ "Accident description Trans-Air Service Flight 671". Retrieved 28 July 2022.
  13. ^ BAC 1–11 overrun report
  14. ^ Kabo Air and MEA jet collide
  15. ^ aerotelegraph.com - "Boeing 747 too old for pilgrims" (German) 10 September 2013
  16. ^ avherald.com - Incident: Kabo B742 at Sokoto on Oct 4th, 2013, touched localizer antenna on approach and burst body gear tyres 7 October 2013
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