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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AirAsiaAirAsia - Wikipedia

    Tune Air officially took over AirAsia on 8 December 2001. The partners turned the company around, and AirAsia subsequently announced a rebrand and relaunch on 15 January 2002 as a low-cost airline . It produced a profit in 2002 and launched new routes from its hub in Kuala Lumpur , undercutting former monopoly operator Malaysia Airlines with promotional fares as low as MYR 10 ( US $2.63).

  2. Air Asia Company Limited (Chinese: 亞洲航空股份有限公司) is a provider of aircraft maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) services headquartered in Taiwan. It is now located in the Tainan Airport .

  3. 其他人也問了

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AirAsia_XAirAsia X - Wikipedia

    AirAsia X (previously known as FlyAsianXpress Sdn. Bhd.),[3] is a Malaysian long-haul low-cost airline and a sister company of AirAsia. It commenced operations on 2 November 2007 with its first service flown from Kuala Lumpur International Airport, Malaysia, to Gold Coast Airport in Australia. AirAsia X flies to destinations within Asia, and ...

  5. This is a list of current and confirmed prospective destinations that AirAsia and its subsidiaries Indonesia AirAsia, Thai AirAsia, Philippines AirAsia, AirAsia Cambodia, AirAsia X and Thai AirAsia X are flying to, as of May 2024. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, the route list (especially for international destinations) may not be up to date ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jetstar_AsiaJetstar Asia - Wikipedia

    Jetstar Asia and Valuair, another Singapore-based airline, merged on 24 July 2005, in the first major consolidation of South-east Asia's crowded and competitive low-cost airline industry. The airlines released a joint statement saying they would continue to operate their normal routes under their own brands in the meantime, with little or no change to the service offered by either airline.

  7. TransAsia Airways (TNA, until January 1992 known by its Chinese-translated name Foshing Airlines;[1][2] traditional Chinese: 復興航空; simplified Chinese: 复兴航空; pinyin: Fùxīng Hángkōng) was a Taiwanese airline based in Neihu District in Taipei. Though the company started its operations focusing mainly on the Taiwanese domestic ...

  8. This is a list of the largest airlines in Asia by fleet size and total passengers carried in a twelve-month period. The table is updated periodically as and when new monthly data are available. Figures are for individual airlines; aggregate figures for airline groups (airlines and their partners/subsidiaries related by full equity ownership) are shown only when they are officially published.