Aviogenex

Aviogenex
IATA ICAO Callsign
- AGX GENEX
Founded May 1968
Fleet size 1
Destinations 19
Parent company Genex Group
Headquarters Belgrade, Serbia
Key people Bojan Nikolić
Website aviogenex.com

Aviogenex (literary Serbian: Aviogeneks / Авиогенекс) was[1] a Serbian charter airline based at Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport. It operated regular and ad hoc charter flights as well as wet-lease services.[2] Prior to the break-up of Yugoslavia, Aviogenex was the busiest charter airline in the country, handling over half a million passengers per year in the late 1980s.[3]

History

Aviogenex had more than 40 years of experience in flying under charter, sub charter and wet lease agreements. Aviogenex was founded on 21 May 1968 as an air transport division of Generalexport, an enterprise for foreign and domestic trade, tourism and air transport.[2] On 30 April 1969 Aviogenex operated its first flight from Belgrade to Düsseldorf on a Tu-134 aircraft.

In 1990 the airline flew 633,932 passengers, with 10 aircraft (5 Boeing 727 and 5 Boeing 737) reaching 17,000 flight hours per year.[4] Since 1991 Aviogenex has oriented to leasing of aircraft and crews, and achieved more than 40,000 flight hours. In this period Aviogenex operated in Europe, Africa, the Middle and Far East, and South America. In 2010 they restarted flights under their own name using a Boeing 737-200 Advanced.[5]

In February 2015 it was announced that Aviogenex will cease operations to be liquidated as the government failed to attract investors for the airline.[1][6]

Services

Aviogenex services included:

Destinations

Aviogenex Tu-134 at Zürich Airport in 1982
Aviogenex Boeing 727-200 at Faro Airport in the 1980s
Aviogenex Boeing 737-200 at London Heathrow Airport in 2009

Aviogenex operated charter services to the following leisure destinations:

Africa
 Egypt
 Tunisia
Asia
 Jordan
Europe
 Cyprus
 Greece
 Serbia
 Spain
 Turkey

Fleet

As of June 2015, Aviogenex had one single Boeing 737-200 in its fleet.

The historic fleet of Aviogenex included 12 Tupolev Tu-134,[7] 7 Boeing 737-200[7] and 5 Boeing 727.[7]

Incidents and accidents

References

External links

Media related to Aviogenex at Wikimedia Commons

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