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Sichuan Airlines: Kunming [25] Thai AirAsia: Bangkok–Don Mueang: Thai Airways International: Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi: T'way Air: Busan, Seoul–Incheon Seasonal: Daegu [26] VietJet Air: Ho Chi Minh City [27] Vietnam Airlines: Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Phnom Penh: West Air: Changsha [28] XiamenAir: Beijing–Daxing [29]
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Watsons personal care stores were subsequently opened in Malaysia (1994), Thailand (1996), and a revival in the Philippines (2002) after 92 years. [5] [13] The first Watsons store in Indonesia opened on 13 January 2006 in Jakarta. [14] In 2019, Watsons reached 7,800 stores and expanded to Vietnam, the 13th operating market of Watsons. [15]
[103] [104] In a deal valued at US$1.7 billion, Vietnam Airlines signed a contract with General Electric in October 2013 for 40 engines to power the Boeing 787 aircraft the airline had on order. [105] [106] In July 2014, a new route to Tokyo-Haneda from Hanoi was introduced. [107] [108] A Vietnam Airlines Airbus A321neo at Da Nang International ...
Suvarnabhumi International Airport (IATA: BKK, ICAO: VTBS) [4] [5] is the main international airport serving Bangkok, the capital of Thailand. [6] [7] Located mostly in Racha Thewa subdistrict, Bang Phli district, Samut Prakan province, it covers an area of 3,240 ha (32.4 km 2; 8,000 acres), making it one of the biggest international airports in Southeast Asia and a regional hub for aviation.
BANGKOK AIR Regional: None 1968 1986 27 Founded as Sahakol Air and commenced operations in 1986 as Bangkok Airways. [1] Nok Air: DD NOK NOK AIR Low-cost: Value Alliance: 2004 2004 14 Subsidiary of Nok Airlines Public Company Limited Thai AirAsia: FD AIQ THAI ASIA Low-cost: None 2003 2004 60 Subsidiary of Asia Aviation Public Company Limited ...
9 September 1988: Vietnam Airlines Flight 831, a Tupolev Tu-134 (built in 1978), registration VN-A102, departed from Hanoi with 81 passengers aboard and crashed while on approach to Bangkok. There were 76 fatalities and the aircraft was entirely destroyed. The aircraft flew into a heavy thunderstorm and was probably struck by lightning.
On 9 December 2004, United Airlines became the first U.S. airline to fly to Vietnam since Pan Am's last flight during the Fall of Saigon in April 1975. Flight UA 869, operated using a Boeing 747-400 landed at Ho Chi Minh City, the terminus of the flight that originated from San Francisco via Hong Kong.