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Yeti Airlines completes 23 years, launches call center

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KATHMANDU: SEPT. 21 – Yeti Airlines has crossed 23 years of flying. Yeti Airlines, Nepal’s largest private airline, has entered its 24th year by crossing 23 springs from today.

Yeti started its first flight on September 21, 1998. Yeti celebrates the same day as an annual celebration.

Anoj Rimal, chief executive officer of the airline, said that “Yeti airlines has been transporting food, medicine, clothes and other goods to the people of the Himalayan region and Karnali, which were not connected to the transport network in the early days of its establishment. And now we are expanding its network internationally as well.”

We would like to thank Yeti Airlines and Tara Air for their courageous pilots and confident crew, skilled technicians, trained staff, diligence, hard work, honesty and trust of the partner organizations added Rimal.

With a journey of 23 years, Yeti has completely ended the Jetstream era and entered the ATR era. Recently, Yeti has sold five of its aircraft.

It has entered the ATR era with the goal of providing customers with comfortable and safe flights. The company has stated that it will immediately purchase more ATR aircraft and add flights to different cities of Nepal.

Yeti Airlines has made significant contributions not only in aviation and tourism but also in the field of sports (especially in cricket, football and golf).

Increasing the number of aircraft in the coming year, increasing market share by increasing flights to new destinations, creating more jobs, expanding services to international destinations through charter flights, refining air services using new technologies and bringing concessional offers that directly benefit passengers and Spokesperson Bartaula said that social responsibilities will be continued.

Yeti currently flies to Nepalgunj, Bhadrapur, Janakpur, Pokhara, Simara, Bhairahawa and Biratnagar on five ATR aircraft, while Tara Air operates four ‘twin-out’ aircraft in remote Himalayan and hilly parts of Lukla, Phaplu, Jomsom, Humla and Jumla. , Rara, Dolpa, Bajura.