Air Zimbabwe 777
Transport minister Joel Biggie Matiza is in Malaysia to conclude the deal for the planes.
The late former President Robert Mugabe personally negotiated the acquisition of four Boeing 777-200 planes which had been retired by Malaysian Airlines in 2016 after one of their fleet disappeared without trace and another was shot down over Ukraine.
Zimbabwe Airways, the ill-fated state-owned successor to Air Zimbabwe whose livery appears on the aircraft, had been quoted $18,5 million each for two of the planes which were then five-years-old, and $16,5 million each for the other two which were 11-years-old, according to former transport minister Joram Gumbo.
A 2017 military coup which ousted Mugabe put the delivery of the planes on the back-burner as Zimbabwe defaulted on payments, amid claims that the plane deal was plagued by corruption.
The new government of President Emmerson Mnangagwa collapsed Zimbabwe Airways, which was headed by Mugabe's son-in-law Simba Chikore, and transferred its assets – including the planes – to Air Zimbabwe.
To date, Zimbabwe has fully paid only two of the four planes – 9M-MRQ and Z-RGM, formerly 9M-MRP. The latter, set to be delivered on Monday, was named in honour of President Mugabe.
Matiza said the second plane would be delivered within weeks, but offered no information on the other two planes – 9M-MRL and 9M-MRM – which were flown to the United States in November 2018, and are believed to be still in Kansas in the state of Missouri.
Data from online flight tracking website FlightRadar shows that Z-RGM, now a 15-year-old plane, on January 16 went on a test flight from Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah Airport located in Subang before returning to the same airport after a one-hour, 49-minute flight over the Strait of Malacca during which it climbed to 40,000 feet.
The test flight was in preparation for its delivery to Zimbabwe on Monday. Matiza will be on the aircraft which is expected to land at the Robert Gabriel Mugabe International Airport at 12.30PM.
The Zimbabwe government desperately wants to shore up Air Zimbabwe, which is now operating just one plane and is weighed down by debts of up to US$300 million.
The 777s will allow Air Zimbabwe to resume overseas flights to the United Kingdom and China, which were abandoned in 2011 amid threats to seize their aircraft by some creditors.
Air Zimbabwe last year took delivery of an Embraer ERJ145 from the United States. The airline has struggled to push through the aircraft's registration, however, after reportedly failing to satisfy know-your-customer requirements over suspicions of money laundering in the original acquisition by Zimbabwe Airways.
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Tendai Mugabe, Harare Bureau. GOVERNMENT has bought Air Zimbabwe two modern Boeing 777-200ER aircraft from Malaysia with the first landing in Harare yesterday and being handed over to the airline. Sub menu Air Zimbabwe. Fleet Air Zimbabwe Full fleet in PDF format Photos Air Zimbabwe Fleet age of Air Zimbabwe Flightlog Air Zimbabwe (54 flights) To see details about aircraft, click on to the number in the appropriate column in the table below. Boeing 777 Boeing 777. The Government has bought Air Zimbabwe (Airzim) two Boeing 777-200ER planes from Malaysia, with the first one landing in Harare yesterday and the second expected in a few weeks.
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Zimbabwe Airways (Harare Int'l) has taken delivery of its first aircraft following the positioning of B777-200(ER) Z-RGM (msn 28421) to Harare Int'l on Wednesday, April 11.
A Zimbabwean government statement said the 13-year-old aircraft is one of two that have been procured by the state via its Zimbabwe Aviation Leasing Company SPV.
Against the backdrop of President Emmerson Mnangagwa's demand for greater transparency on the murky project given its purported ties to officials in the former Mugabe regime, government has issued a statement clarifying the Zimbabwe Airways project timeline.
In the same statement, it said Air Zimbabwe (UM, Harare Int'l) had approached the State Procurement Board (SPB) in October 2016 for permission to acquire four ex-Malaysia Airlines (MH, Kuala Lumpur Int'l) B777s, a request that was duly granted in November of that year.
The Zimbabwean state, through its Ministry of Finance and Economic Development, then took the decision to secure funds to acquire the four widebodies alongside eight Embraer Regional Jets.
However, to date, only enough funding to acquire two B777s and one ERJ has been raised.
'Government also took the decision to lease the planes to third parties up to such a time as Air Zimbabwe develops a credible business plan to run the planes on a sustainable, profitable basis,' it said.
'Accordingly, Government decided to lease the planes to a new aircraft firm called Zimbabwe Airways whch has already put in place credible plans for said planes.'
The start-up has yet to secure its AOC from the Civil Aviation Authority of Zimbabwe (CAAZ).
Air Zimbabwe 777 International
About Zimbabwe Airways
Air Zimbabwe 777 Cargo
Type | Scheduled Carrier |
---|---|
Base | Harare Int'l |