BAe146-200

Hemus Air (Bulgarian title: Хемус Ер) was an airline based in Sofia, Bulgaria. It operated scheduled domestic and international services from Sofia and Varna, as well as charter, cargo and air ambulance services. Its main base was Sofia Airport, with a hub at Varna Airport.

History

Hemus Air, named after the ancient name for the Balkan mountains, was owned by Varna-based industrial/financial enterprise TIM. The airline was established in 1986 as an autonomous unit of Balkan Bulgarian Airlines and started operations in 1987. It initially operated ambulance services, flight calibration and aerial photography and, from December 1990, also schedules. In 1996, it became a separate legal entity of Balkan Bulgarian Airlines. Hemus Air was privatized by Bulgarian investors in 2002 faced stiff competition from foreign carriers, as well as the newly established successor of Balkan, Bulgaria Air.

Hemus Air's management pledged to unite the major Bulgarian airlines and was selected as the preferred bidder for the sale of Bulgaria Air by the Bulgarian government. In November 2006, Balkan Hemus Group sealed a deal to purchase Bulgaria Air with a 99.99% share of the airline for €6.6 million. The new airline would operate under the Bulgaria Air brand. Hemus promised to invest a further €86m over the next five years and in 2007 began to coordinate the schedules and operations with Bulgaria Air. As of February 2009, all Hemus aircraft were operating for the nes parent company, Bulgaria Air. This latter absorbed assets and operations in early 2010s.

Destinations

All Hemus Air destinations are now operated under the commercial brand of Bulgaria Air.

Fleet

Yakovlev Yak-40 was the first jet-propelled aircraft in service
Tupolev Tu-134s were instrumental to enlarge the operations range
Tupolev Tu-154 was the largest aircraft in operation

The Hemus Air fleet includes the following aircraft (at July 2012):

Hemus Air fleet
AircraftTotalPassengersRoutesNotes
Airbus A319-1002144Short-Medium haul Europe and Middle EastOperating for Bulgaria Air.
ATR 42-300146Short haul BalkansStored at Sofia Airport.
Avro RJ70126Short haul VIPOperating private and VIP charters.
BAe146-200390Short-Medium haul EuropeOperating for Bulgaria Air, 2 are stored at Sofia Airport.
BAe146-3003110Short haul EuropeOperating for Bulgaria Air,
Total10

Most of these aircraft are operating for Bulgaria Air until the two airlines merge; then they will all be transferred to Bulgaria Air's fleet.

Retired fleet

Accidents and incidents

  • On 2 August 1988, Yak-40 LZ-DOK failed to get airborne and crashed after it overran the runway at Sofia Airport, killing 29 of 37 on board. All civil traffic had been halted at Sofia Airport to allow Todor Zhivkov's Tu-154 to take off. But the Tu-154 was delayed, so ATC cleared the Yak-40 to take off "as quickly as possible". In their haste, the crew forgot to set the trim correctly.
  • Hemus Air Flight 7081 was hijacked en route from Beirut International Airport to Varna on 3 September 1996. The hijacker, a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, allowed the 150 passengers to leave the aircraft at Varna and he and the eight crew members continued to Oslo Airport, Gardermoen where he gave up. He initially claimed that he only wanted to seek asylum, but he later claimed he was under orders to crash the aircraft into Oslo.

Notes

External links

Media related to Hemus Air at Wikimedia Commons