|
Plane Crash!
bmacd
14:47h
Removing or restricting permits is the most severe penalty available to countries which have found major safety failings on foreign aircraft and are not satisfied that the necessary improvements have been undertaken. The UK has, however, revealed that four of the 2002 bans were imposed in Switzerland, with one each in Belgium and the Netherlands. Switzerland has confirmed to BBC News Online that 23 planes are currently banned, but says confidentiality laws and a "gentlemen's" agreement prevent it from naming the airlines involved, or even confirming how many of them there are. A 24th plane was banned - the downed Flash Boeing 737. Belgium has not commented on its 2002 case, and the Netherlands has denied banning or restricting a company that year. The BBC's inquiries have revealed that the same Flash plane which plunged into the Red Sea on Saturday failed a Swiss safety test in October 2002 but passed a French one in Toulouse in 2003. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3377953.stm ... Link (0 comments) ... Comment
Ego-City is no more *Sniff*
snoogans00
11:33h
Das «Ego-City» genannte Haus im Zürcher Kreis 4 ist am Montagvormittag von den Bewohnern den Besitzern übergeben worden ... Link (0 comments) ... Comment
Nokia to establish a new corporate office in the New York metropolitan area
snoogans00
16:39h
Nokia will establish a new corporate office in the New York metropolitan area to serve as the base for Nokia's newly established Enterprise Solutions business group, the CFO's office, parts of different corporate functions and some regional operations ... Link (3 comments) ... Comment |
Online for 8130 days
Last modified: 2/29/20, 7:15 PM Status
Youre not logged in ... Login
Menu
Search
Calendar
Recent updates
|