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Najib Ramli

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About Najib Ramli

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  1. the way i see it is quite simple, if the recent Ryanair flight cancellation fiasco which led to the flight cancellation affecting almost 300,000 people during the European summer holiday season had not happend, PB would probably have stayed with MAB.... but due to the fiasco, the current COO is leaving and Ryanair turned to PB to fill the position. besides, the COO position might provide an inside track for him to become Ryanair CEO, the biggest airline in Europe by number of passengers flown...making it almost an irresistible opportunity for him to pass up
  2. Indeed, GM went through the same exercise in which NGMCo (new GM co) continued operation while the "old" GM assumes all the debts. But nobody calls GM "New GM" or anything like that. Granted the "New GM" then changed their legal entity name to General Motors Company LLC afterwards but the old legal entity name was actually General Motors Corporation. Regardless of that people still call it GM that being the familiar company name. So in MH case it's quite similar isn't it. Despite the change in legal entity name,the conpany is still called MAS since that's the most familiar brand name
  3. I would say the US TARP bailouts, UK Bank bailouts post 2008 are quite similar in nature. New laws/acts were passed in parliament/congress to enable tax payer's money to flow to these companies. But I agree, digressing too much as this should be about Cathay
  4. well my company (not a GLC but a top 10 Global Fortune 500 company) did kind a like similar thing Staff were asked to volunteer and many actually got compensation as good as if they continue working till retirement. A person I know actually got 3 years worth of compensation when he only has 2 years to go. Those who were thinking of retiring early held off for half a year and volunteered and got cash bonanza (where I'm located you cannot get lump sum payment from your pensions fund when you retired so this is really huge for them) I would say at the end of the day it depends on the jurisdiction of location where the company is located and the origin of the company. An American company is almost always brutal while those form Europe and Canada are much more compassionate. Cathay om the other hand is a bit of a mix Chinese-UK organization so I have no idea...
  5. Considering the KLM flights to KUL (with onwards connection to CGK) is almost always full despite the fare (at least 25-30% higher compared to when MH was still flying) I would say AMS is the logical choice
  6. inflight movie for a domestic US flight? (there fix it for you )
  7. I have a quick question that's back to topic related (though good sarcasm and petty argument, really?) In incidents like this, the landing gear is definitely toast and there should be some body impact as well. Since repair almost always take place on site, who does the repair, where do they get the equipments (to hoist aircraft etc, not spares) and how do they check for structural integrity prior to flying again? I would assume a major airport would have those facilities but at a smaller airport like Sibu things probably aren't readily available
  8. perhaps this is time for some of us here to roll up their sleeves and join in to help out the company? or at least help out in finding people suited for the job it is by all means somewhat of a recruitment call
  9. getting a bit out of topic here, what i understand is that you're saying that MYR was falling in value vs EUR after LH introduced their direct services here thus it's possibly one of the factor for their pull out.. the fact is the reverse however...it was EUR that was falling in value vs MYR in 2015 (due to the Greek crisis) and in 2010 to 2014 (post sub prime crisis where European banks had to be bailed out and era of USD 100 oil price)...prior to those years MYR has always been above 4.5 to the EUR unless you go wayyyy back so i really doubt that LH actually decided to cancel the direct service due to currency exchange rates... if you look at AF, it's no surprise that they cancel the direct service. as a group AirFrance-KLM passenger numbers increased as per latest report but broken down by airline, AF is bleeding customers while KLM is adding customers. that's quite telling about AF performance in general. as being told in this thread, the oil and gas traffic was decimated by the oil price crash, contributing to significant drop in premium traffic for these careers. i mean LH and AirFrance-KLM even have a special FF membership for those working in Oil and Gas. you're entitled to premium membership services right form the start even when you have 0 miles (though as per recent changes lounge access are only for transfer passengers for FlyingBlue Petroleum). i would assume that the industry (though now decimated) contribute significant traffic, else they would not have bothered to introduce such services regarding why people is investing in the US. people park their money in Malaysia (and developing countries) because of the higher returns (high interest rates), the US has had extremely low rates (near 0%, imagine buying a house for 1% interest rate, good for consumer, not so good for lenders) for many years now. the recent hike however makes it more attractive to park money in the US itself. anyway back to the topic of SIA, network changes are quite inevitable i would say. even the all mighty Emirates is struggling in the current environment. you would have though cheaper oil price would mean cheaper operating costs for the airlines and thus more profits, but it turned out the cheaper oil price also suck money out of many people's pockets as well...
  10. A few years back MYR to EUR conversion rates is exactly where it is right now (4.5-4.6 level) so I don't actually see how you come to the 3/4 conclusion. It was only briefly during Greek crisis in 2015 and a few years during USD 100 oil price that MYR traded at below 4.00 for EUR (unless you go wayyyyy back of course) But then again I don't think inter company repatriation of money works by simple exchange rates calculation Also I agree with Jani that supposedly weak ringgit should be boon for Europeans since things should be cheaper.. However the truth on the ground is that they're still reeling from the impact of the previous and recent economic crisis
  11. Considering that this thread went 3 pages, I agree with Jani that indeed people were freaking out unnecessarily And regarding that even Jani wasn't sure before someone clarified, you do realise that he's probably not authorised to make such statement on behalf on MAHB right. Then again maybe that's just me but I would think that almost all public companies haave a policy that an employee should not make any public statements without prior authorization
  12. I thought that was indeed the extent of the partnership, a low key partnership rather than a full blown one... Excerpt from The star: "Under the partnership, MAS will get numerous benefits including LED and static board brand exposure at each home game at Anfield and exposure on the Liverpool FC website, publications and Facebook page" It's definitely not a big sponsorship like Garuda used to have.. Even on the website the MAS logo is down there along with Konami, Maxxis etc rather than the big players..
  13. part of both obviously....and as for the side reading, are there anybody else that would actually give such low interest loans + technology transfer + manufacturing in the current economic climate? at the end of the day it's business and money matters...not too different from the UK i would say where their big + better known companies (automotive, steel etc) are probably owned by India+China because they have the money.... and the nuclear sector is own solely by France (EDF) after German companies pull out (E.ON and RWE) because they're the only ones willing to invest
  14. i would guess Australia/New Zealand would be the most logical choice considering the lack of 1 stop connection to those countries... aside from that, the direct connection might be due to the need to facilitate businesses between those 2 countries and some other Asian countries...lot's of tech firms operate from Israel lately and Singapore plus some other Asian countries are high tech manufacturing hubs indeed, this is the official standing of the OIC (and many of its members)...aside from that human rights record in occupied territories is appalling by any possible metric..so you don't need to be a Muslim to be opposed to this....even in Europe/US people actually do take this into account...just look at the previous example that i mentioned (EU labelling) and the past Caterpillar controversy
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