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All Nippon Airways Co., Ltd. (全日本空輸株式会社, Zen Nippon Kūyu Kabushiki gaisha, ANA) is a Japanese airline headquartered in Minato, Tokyo. ANA operates services to both domestic and international destinations and is Japan's largest airline, ahead of its main rival flag carrier Japan Airlines . [ 6 ]
This is a list of airports that All Nippon Airways flies to. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Countries with destinations of All Nippon Airways (as of November 2017, including seasonal and future destinations).
All Nippon Airways (ANA) Flight 58 was a Japanese domestic flight from Chitose Airport to Haneda Airport, operated by All Nippon Airways (ANA). On 30 July 1971, at 02:04 local time, a Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF) F-86F Sabre jet fighter collided with the Boeing 727 airliner operating the flight, causing both aircraft to crash.
This category regards All Nippon Airways (ANA) and its subsidiary airlines The main article for this category is All Nippon Airways . Wikimedia Commons has media related to All Nippon Airways .
On July 23, 1999, an All Nippon Airways Boeing 747-481D with 503 passengers on Flight 61, including 14 children and 14 crew members on board, took off from Tokyo Haneda Airport in Ōta, Tokyo, Japan and was en route to New Chitose Airport in Chitose, Japan, near Sapporo [1] when it was hijacked by Yūji Nishizawa.
All Nippon Airways: 全日本空輸 NH ANA ALL NIPPON 1952 StarAlliance Japan Airlines: 日本航空 JL JAL JAPAN AIR 1951 OneWorld 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: スプリング・ジャパン IJ SJO J ...
ANA Wings Co., Ltd. (ANAウイングス株式会社 ANA Uingusu Kabushiki Kaisha) is a regional airline with its corporate headquarters at Itami Airport near Osaka, Japan and a wholly owned subsidiary of All Nippon Airways (ANA). [1] The airline was formed on 1 October 2010 through the merger of Air Next, Air Central and Air Nippon Network.
All Nippon Airways Flight 533, registration JA8658, was a NAMC YS-11 en route from Osaka, Japan, to Matsuyama on the island of Shikoku.It was the fifth crash in Japan in 1966 and the second one experienced by All Nippon Airways that year, the first being the loss of Flight 60 on February 4.