Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The airline resumed its Manila–Singapore flights on August 31, 2006, [20] and launched a direct flight from Cebu to Singapore on October 23. It was the first low-cost airline to serve the Cebu-Singapore-Cebu sector, [21] and competing directly with Singapore Airlines subsidiary SilkAir, the only Philippine carrier serving the route for years until Philippine Airlines resumed direct service ...
Cebu: Mactan–Cebu International Airport: Base [1] Dumaguete: Sibulan Airport [1] Tagbilaran: Bohol–Panglao International Airport [1] Tagbilaran Airport: Airport closed: Philippines (Davao Region) Davao: Francisco Bangoy International Airport: Base [1] Philippines (Eastern Visayas) Calbayog: Calbayog Airport: Terminated [a] Catarman ...
The airline's main flight operations are located at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Metro Manila. Its subsidiary PAL Express mainly operates regional routes while PAL operates both domestic (Cebu, Davao, General Santos, Kalibo, Laoag, Manila, and Zamboanga, among others) and international routes mainly in the Asia Pacific region. [15 ...
Passengers probably didn't sleep through an experimental safety demonstration on a recent flight of Cebu Pacific Air. That's because flight attendants actually danced through the demo – to ...
Opened on April 27, 1966, the airport serves as a hub for Philippine Airlines, and as an operating base for Cebu Pacific, Philippines AirAsia, and Sunlight Air. The airport is managed by the Mactan–Cebu International Airport Authority and operated by the GMR–Megawide Cebu Airport Corporation.
The domestic market is dominated by the Cebu Pacific group which has a 53% market share, followed by the Philippine Airlines group which has 31%, followed by AirAsia, having a 16% share. This list of airlines enumerates local airlines in the Philippines which have a current air operator's certificate issued by the Civil Aviation Authority .
Philippine Airlines Flight 434, sometimes referred to as PAL434 or PR434, was a scheduled flight on December 11, 1994, from Manila to Tokyo with a quick stopover in Cebu on a Boeing 747-283B that was seriously damaged by a bomb, killing one passenger and damaging vital control systems, although the plane was in a repairable state. [1]
Philippine Air Lines Flight 345 was a domestic flight operated by Philippine Air Lines that crashed on approach to Mactan–Cebu International Airport, Cebu. On February 28, 1967, the aircraft was several miles before Runway 04 when it suddenly pitched upwards at a nose-high altitude.