- 1997, the
Swissair Group was
renamed SAirGroup (although it was
again renamed Swissair Group in 2001), with four subdivisions:
SAirLines (to
which Swissair...
-
shareholder Swissair in
November 1995.[citation needed]
After parent company SAirGroup had to
apply for a debt
restructuring moratorium in
October 2001, it became...
- At the time of the crash,
Crossair was a
majority owned subsidiary of
SAirGroup. The
crash of
Crossair Flight 498 was the
first time in Crossair's 25-year...
-
September 1991. In
April 2001,
Raffles Holdings acquired Swissôtel from
SAirGroup for 268
million euros, thus
increasing its room
capacity by 139% to 13...
-
member of the
board of
SAirGroup.
After his
resignation as Minister, he was
executive vice
president of the
Board of
SAirGroup and from 1 May 2000 as...
- time, both
Swissair and
Crossair were part of the same
holding company,
SAirGroup.
Crossair later changed its name to
Swiss International Air Lines, and...
- with Air
France which led into the
formation of the
SkyTeam alliance.
SAirGroup had held
negotiations with
American Airlines about extending their cooperative...
-
shares to the
Swiss company SAirGroup Holding; this then led to the airline's
incorporation into the then-nascent
Qualiflyer Group.
Expansion of LOT's route...
- Aérodrome du Castellet. Over the
years KLM, Euralair,
Lufthansa and the
SAir Group (Swissair),
which sold
their stake in 2001, all had
ownership stakes in...
-
subsequently merged with Air Liberté. The
merged entity was sold on to the
SAir Group in 2001,
which in turn
merged Air Liberté with AOM
becoming the renamed...