FCTG steps in to assist passengers affected by SAA flight cancellations
SAA said it would be making ad hoc cancellations to its services out of Perth due to ‘low market demand during February, March, May and June’.
Flights on the following dates from Johannesburg are being reviewed:
• February: 13, 16 and 18
• March: 2, 6, 9 and 11
• May: 5, 14, 18, 23 and 30
• June: 3, 6, 11, 18 and 25
SAA spokesperson, Tlali Tlali said the tactical cancellations in the Australian market are commonplace in the airline industry and forms part of commercial decisions taken by airlines all the time. “The rationale behind our decision is based on matching capacity with demand. The cancellations we have announced are for the off-peak season where the demand is low. In addition, this forms part of our forward planning aimed at bringing more efficiencies in the business and minimising the impact on our customers, hence the advance notification about the cancellations.”
SAA has promised a flexible re-accommodation policy that will enable the airline to transfer and/or accommodate affected customers on other flights.
Implementing a long-term sustainable strategy
Tlali stressed that SAA is not pulling out of the Australian market, but that the airline wants to conduct business in a manner that brings more commercial logic, cognisant of the costs and overall customer experience.
Corporate Traveller South Africa GM, Oz Desai says the Johannesburg-Perth route is popular among South African corporate travellers, but that the measure announced by SAA is a routine timetable adjustment. “We support any initiatives that SAA employs to ensure its long-term sustainability and will work with our customers to re-accommodate them with minimal inconvenience.”
CemAir grounded indefinitely
Earlier this week, the South African Civil Aviation Authority (SACAA) also announced that CemAir had been grounded indefinitely. The airline, based at OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg flies to Bloemfontein, Cape Town, George, Hoedspruit, Margate, Plettenberg Bay and Port Elizabeth.
CemAir said it is working with the SACAA to resolve the issue as expeditiously as possible. In the interim, the airline promised it is working closely with other carriers to accommodate passengers with minimum inconvenience.