http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/article/15317.html

April 3, 2009 


Putri Prameshwari & Janeman Latul

EU Ban Cost Garuda About $9m Annually
State-owned carrier PT Garuda Indonesia has lost potential sales of about $9 
million annually as a result of the European Union's blanket ban on Indonesian 
airlines since July 2007, a senior company official said on Friday. 
"We lost about 50 percent of our sales [to European passengers], worth between 
$750,000 and $1.5 million a month since July 2007," Emirsyah Satar, Garuda 
president director, said late on Friday. "However, this potential loss in sales 
is actually smaller compared to our total sales of around $1.8 billion in 2008 
alone. The main problem for us is the bad image about our airline."

Emir also said that Garuda currently has no code-share agreement with 
European-based airlines. But even if there was one, the ban would have forced 
the airlines to terminate their cooperation with flag carrier Garuda Indonesia.

In July 2007, EU imposed a blanket ban on all Indonesian airlines from flying 
to Europe. The ban, a source of embarrassment to the government, was based on 
69 recommendations - including the improvement of oversight - from the 
International Civil Aviation Organization's audit of local airlines in 2004-07.

'We lost around 50 percent of our sales [to European passengers] ' 

Emirsyah Satar, Garuda president director 

Garuda has repeatedly asked the EU audit team what it needed to do to improve 
its safety performance, including attending the hearing with the EU aviation 
council in Brussel last year, along with Mandala Airlines and Airfast, to ask 
for an exemption. The council, however, refused to grant the request.

"We have already asked EU auditors what else can be done to lift the ban, but 
they say that it is a regulatory problem," Emirsyah said.

However, Transportation Minister Jusman Syafii Djamal blamed differing 
standards of safety regulation as the main reason why the EU decided to delay 
reviewing Garuda's security measures until June, despite the fact that it has 
repeatedly passed international safety audits by the International Air 
Transport Association. EU was expected to review Garuda Indonesia's security 
measures in April.

"There is no guarantee that the European Union would lift its blanket ban on 
Indonesian airlines. The EU has its own standard in assessing our aircraft," 
Jusman said. 

He added that there should be a single international safety standard for air 
transportation to avoid overlapping of regulations between international 
aviation organizations.

A statement released by IATA on Wednesday said that Garuda Indonesia, the only 
IATA member from Indonesia, was listed on the IATA Operational Safety Audit 
registry. Some 230 airlines from around the world are members of IATA, which 
conducts a safety audit for all of its members once every two years. 

Herry Bhakti, director general of civil aviation at the Transportation 
Ministry, said that as of March, Indonesia had fulfilled 90 percent of ICAO's 
69 recommendations. However, in their last meeting, the EU had not decided to 
lift the ban, and delayed it for another three months instead.

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