Indonesia to announce new safety ratings for airlines: minister
[JAKARTA] Indonesia's transport minister announced plans on Tuesday to introduce safety ratings for all airlines operating in the country starting as early as next month.
Ignasius Jonan said airlines would be evaluated every three months and those that got poor safety ratings would be punished.
"I want all airlines to follow the rating. We will become the inspector," Mr Jonan told reporters, declining to elaborate on what the ratings system or sanctions against airlines would entail.
"We will announce (details) perhaps early next month," he added.
Indonesia's patchy aviation record has again come under scrutiny since an AirAsia jet crashed into the Java Sea last month killing all 162 people on board.
President Joko Widodo has called for an urgent overhaul of the aviation sector, which is among the fastest-growing in the region, with airlines mushrooming to cater to demand from a growing middle class.
Analysts say infrastructure has failed to keep up with the boom in air travel in Southeast Asia's biggest economy, leading to overcrowded airports.
The transport minister proposed a number of rule changes at a parliamentary hearing last week, including requiring daily health checks for flight crews and air traffic controllers, and that route permits be obtained four months in advance.
The transport ministry has suspended AirAsia's Surabaya-Singapore licence for flying on a Sunday, for which it did not have permission. However, the ministry has said this had no bearing on the crash.
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Transport & Logistics
China’s top airlines improve balance sheet in Q1; outlook positive for May Day
Ford’s BlueCruise probed by regulators after fatal crashes
China’s BYD shows effects of price war with weaker first-quarter earnings
Maersk unit worth more than US$1 billion set to trade in spinoff
China State Shipbuilding to build 18 LNG ships for QatarEnergy
Tesla clears key regulatory hurdles for self-driving in China during Musk’s visit