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List of airports in Japan; List of airlines of Japan; Tokyu Corporation; Japan Air System was a wholly owned subsidiary of Tokyu, and the company was merged into Japan Airlines. So, Tokyu had Japan Airlines' shares of 4 per cent until 2009. Now, Japan Airlines holds Tokyu's shares of 0.16 per cent because cooperates with Tokyu. [204]
The head of Japan Airlines catering service in Anchorage committed suicide shortly afterwards and was the only fatality of the incident. It was only luck that the pilots did not eat the omelettes (their body clocks were not in the right time zone for breakfast) and become incapacitated, leading some airlines to forbid pilots eating certain ...
Air Japan: エアージャパン NQ AJX AIR JAPAN 2001 (2024) All Nippon Airways: 全日本空輸 NH ANA ALL NIPPON 1952 Japan Airlines: 日本航空 JL JAL JAPAN AIR 1951 Jetstar Japan: ジェットスター・ジャパン GK JJP ORANGE LINER 2012 Peach Aviation: ピーチ・アビエーション MM APJ AIR PEACH 2012 Spring Airlines Japan
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J-Air is a wholly owned subsidiary of Japan's flag carrier, Japan Airlines (JAL) and an affiliate member of the Oneworld alliance. The airline was founded on 8 August 1996, when JAL restructured JAL Flight Academy and J-Air was separated; and began operations as a separate entity from Hiroshima-Nishi Airport on 1 November.
On May 15, 1971, the airline merged with Toa Airways to form Toa Domestic Airlines; on April 1, 1988 the merged airline renamed itself to Japan Air System. [1] Japan Air System merged into Japan Airlines in the early 2000s. [2] Nearly all of the aircraft used in the Japan Domestic Airlines' fleet were consisted of NAMC YS-11s. Both airlines had ...
A Japan Air System Airbus A300-600R with the JAL "Arc of the Sun" logo on the body. JAS and Japan Airlines announced their merger in November 2001. It was the first major airline industry realignment in Japan in three decades, and partly a consequence of the slump in worldwide air traffic following the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United ...
The incident occurred aboard a Boeing 747 operated by Japan Air Lines. The registration number of the aircraft is not known. At the time of the incident, Japan Air Lines had both the 747-100 and the 747-200B in their long-distance fleet. [1] The aircraft was carrying 344 passengers and 20 crew members. [2]