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Jagson Airlines





Jagson Airlines has the credit of being the first private airline in the country to operate scheduled flight on a regular basis with an unblemished record of operations since 1992. Our commitment to quality, superior customer services and great emphasis on safety has made us the most preferred airlines on feeder routes.

We pride ourselves on having an unmatched record of on-time flights coupled with International standards of safety, comfort and dinning experience.

:: Contact ::

Delhi Jagson Airlines ltd.
3rd Floor,Vandana Building,
11-Tolstoy Marg, New Delhi-110001
23721593, 23721594, 23328579,23328580,
23323949,23730685

Delhi airport Jagson Airlines ltd.
191 Airport,Terminal - 1B, Palam Airport,
ph.# 55469925,55515132

You can also email us at : jagson_id@eth.net


Pondicherry airport gearing up to resume operations
Wednesday March 22 2006

PONDICHERRY: The Pondicherry airport at Lawspet is gearing up for revival of commercial services again, 15 years after Vayudoot stopped its flight operations in 1991.

According to sources, Jagson Airlines, a Delhi-based private company, which had come forward to operate flights to Chennai, Bangalore and Tirupati, would start operations once the Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) gave the nod.

“Jagson Airlines is awaiting clearance from the DGCA,” said Gautam Reddy, director, Tourism.

The airport is being readied by upgrading and modifying the facilities as per the directions given by a DGCA team - comprising Regional Controller of Air Safety Bir Singh Rai and Regional Deputy Commissioner, Civil Aviation Security, P Gauri Shankar - which assessed the facilities on February 24.

Sources at the airport said that by mid-April, the entire work would be complete and a report sent to the DGCA.

Airports Authority of India (AAI) had bought an ‘aerodrome beacon’ for installing at the airport.

The 80-kg gadget would help pilots locate the airport from air. The green and white lights fitted on a rotator in the instrument could be seen by pilots from a distance of 25 km. The beam of the air control tower at the airport was being raised for installation of the gadget, sources said.

According to AAI officials, the airport already had the logistic support machinery and its 4,000-feet runway was in good shape. It did not require any relaying or repairs. The airport had been handling trainer aircraft from Orient Flight School and NCC and occasionally some chartered flights.

However, arrangements were required for security purposes - both passenger security and runway security. The airport office was coordinating with the territorial administration over the security arrangements. The aircraft security would be arranged by the airlines operator.

The fire-fighting machinery was being upgraded from Category-2 to Category -3. The equipment was already available at the airport and more personnel had to be deputed, an AAI official said.

An x-ray baggage screening machine was in the process of being installed at the airport. The works on refurbishing the lounge, the arrival hall and the security area, where the passengers wait to board the flight after check-in, would start shortly.

“Around 30 to 40 chairs were being dispatched from Tiruchy, which would be put in place immediately,” said an official.

Moreover, AAI authorities were working out the space allocation for counters for Tirupati, Bangalore and Chennai.


Jagson airlines to acquire 20 planes

New Delhi, Feb. 24, 2006. (PTI): Low cost carrier Jagson Airlines, which has announced plans to launch domestic operations covering nine cities from April-May, on Thursday said it had firmed up plans to purchase 20 Airbus A-321s at an estimated price of 1.3 billion dollars.

Announcing this, the airline's President and CEO Uttam Kumar Bose told PTI that talks with the European manufacturer Airbus Industrie were going on and "We will be signing the agreement shortly. We are now working on the financial aspects of the agreement".

He said the airline would be placing firm orders for 14 of these aircrafts and keep an option for six more. Besides public sector Indian, Jagson is so far the only Indian airline to place orders for A-321s.

"The planes would be in a two-class configuration, making Jagson the first low cost carrier to give this option to its customers", Bose said.

The negotiations were carried out between Airbus and Jagson at the just-concluded Singapore Airshow.

Jagson, which became one of the first private carriers in 1992 to operate small aircrafts between Delhi and towns of Himachal Pradesh and later to other North Indian cities, plans to employ about 800 people in the first year and take it to 3,000 by the third year of its operations.

Bose said the airline plans to launch its flights with a Delhi-Bangalore service in April-May and then cover Patna, Mumbai, Kolkata, Guwahati, Jaipur, Dibrugarh and Goa. In the second phase, it would add flights to these sectors and also expand operations to Lucknow, Kochi and Hyderabad.





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