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Airalsland
Airalsland logo.png
IATA ICAO Callsign
AA ALS ALSLANDIC
Founded13 October 1927 (1927-10-13) (as MIL)
27 April 2006 (2006-04-27) (as Airalsland)
HubsYndyk Airport
Focus citiesWottested International
Frequent-flyer programAiralsland+
Subsidiaries
  • Euclosky
  • Airalsland Cargo
Fleet size61
Destinations101
Parent companyAiralsland Group
HeadquartersYndyk Airport
Yndyk, Alsland
Key peopleGeljer Rijpma, CEO
RevenueIncrease EUC 2,994 million (2020)
Operating incomeDecrease EUC 94 million (2020)
Net incomeDecrease EUC 55 million (2020)
Employees7,009 (31 December 2020)
Websiteairalsland.com

History

Collapse of MIL Alsland

Restructuring

Expansion

Labour disputes

Bankruptcy and state takeover

Corporate affairs

Ownership and structure

Subsidiaries

Euclosky

Airalsland Cargo

Corporate design

Liveries

Uniforms

Destinations

Codeshare agreements

Fleet

Current fleet

Historical fleet

Services

Airalsland+

Cabin

Business class

Premium economy class

Economy class

Lounges

In-flight entertainment

In-flight magazine

Accidents and incidents

As MIL

  • On October 17 2005, a Boeing 757 was taking off from Wottested airport when it stalled, flipped over and crashed into a field south of the runway. All 39 passengers and 7 crew onboard were killed, this was the first deadly air accident in MIL's history and contributed to it's collapse two months later. The reason for the crash was blamed on poor maintenance as well as MIL increasing pressure on pilots to not be late which led to the crew rushing the take-off checklist and incorrectly setting the flaps. As a result of the crash all MIL flights were grounded immediately and the company collapsed shortly afterwards.

As Airalsland

Wreckage of Flight 997 before it's removal
  • On 31 July 2014, Flight 997 from Keisi to Yndyk overshot the runway whilst landing at Yndyk International Airport and burst into flames, killing 7 people onboard and injuring 200. The cause of the crash was blamed on bad weather in the area. This was the second worst air accident in Alsland.
  • On 19 December 2019, an Airbus A320 had to be evacuated after smoke was smelt in the cabin as the plane taxied to take off in Verlois. A flight attendant suffered a dislocated shoulder after falling from an evacuation slide. Faulty wiring in the plane's seatback in-flight entertainment system was blamed. A company wide inspection found faulty wiring in a majority of it's fleet causing the airline to cancel 90% of it's flights over the nativity period.