AOM French Airlines

AOM French Airlines, previously named Air Outre-Mer, was the second-largest airline in France that operated from 1988 until 2001. Its head office was in Building 363 at Orly Airport, Paray-Vieille-Poste.

Foundation
Air Outre Mer, or AOM for short, was founded in 1988 in the French overseas département of the island of Réunion and began scheduled passenger service in 1990 with a McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 and a Dornier 228. In October 1991, Air Outre Mer merged with Air Minerve, a French airline which was based at Orly Airport and had operated since 1975. The two companies began operating under the name AOM French Airlines although the administrative name was "AOM-Minerve S.A.". Air Minerve was the first airline to compete directly with Air Inter on the French domestic airline market by opening a Paris (Orly) - Nice route in May 1990. In February 1999, Swissair acquired a 49% stake in the airline as a part of its "hunter strategy". For most of the decade, the airline fiercely competed with Air France on both the French domestic market and on the air routes to the French overseas territories.

Merger
Due to inappropriate fleet management and overcapacity, the airline quickly accumulated huge debts and consequently ceased operations in 2001 (possibly as a result of the bursting of the dot-com bubble and the early 2000s recession which followed). The airline's final bankruptcy was approved after several months of strikes. On 25 March 2001 AOM French Airlines merged with Air Liberté, the airline retaining the name "Air Liberté". On 22 September 2001 the airline was renamed "Air Lib". AOM's disappearance was followed by several other French airlines in the next several years.

Destinations
AOM French Airlines served the following destinations:

France

 * Marseille – Marseille Provence Airport
 * Nice – Nice Côte d'Azur Airport
 * Paris – Orly Airport
 * Perpignan – Llabanère Airport
 * Toulon – Toulon-Hyères Airport

French overseas departments and territories

 * French Guiana
 * Cayenne – Cayenne-Rochambeau Airport
 * Guadeloupe
 * Pointe-à-Pitre – Pointe-à-Pitre International Airport
 * Saint Martin – Princess Juliana International Airport
 * Martinique
 * Fort-de-France – Le Lamentin Airport
 * New Caledonia
 * Nouméa – La Tontouta International Airport
 * Réunion
 * Saint-Denis – Roland Garros Airport
 * Tahiti
 * Papeete – Faa'a International Airport

International routes

 * Sydney – Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport (Paris-Colombo-Sydney-Nouméa from November 1995, ceased 2001.)
 * Nassau – Lynden Pindling International Airport
 * Havana – José Martí International Airport
 * Varadero – Juan Gualberto Gómez Airport
 * Punta Cana – Punta Cana International Airport
 * Quito – Old Mariscal Sucre International Airport
 * Tokyo – Narita International Airport
 * Tripoli – Tripoli International Airport
 * Malé – Velana International Airport
 * Colombo – Bandaranaike International Airport (Paris-Colombo-Sydney-Nouméa from November 1995, ceased 2001.)
 * Zürich – Zürich Airport
 * Bangkok – Don Mueang International Airport (Paris-Bangkok-Nouméa, until November 1995.)
 * 🇺🇸 United States
 * Los Angeles – Los Angeles International Airport
 * Ho Chi Minh City – Tan Son Nhat International Airport
 * Malé – Velana International Airport
 * Colombo – Bandaranaike International Airport (Paris-Colombo-Sydney-Nouméa from November 1995, ceased 2001.)
 * Zürich – Zürich Airport
 * Bangkok – Don Mueang International Airport (Paris-Bangkok-Nouméa, until November 1995.)
 * 🇺🇸 United States
 * Los Angeles – Los Angeles International Airport
 * Ho Chi Minh City – Tan Son Nhat International Airport
 * Bangkok – Don Mueang International Airport (Paris-Bangkok-Nouméa, until November 1995.)
 * 🇺🇸 United States
 * Los Angeles – Los Angeles International Airport
 * Ho Chi Minh City – Tan Son Nhat International Airport
 * Ho Chi Minh City – Tan Son Nhat International Airport

Fleet
AOM French Airlines has operated the following aircraft throughout its existence:

Accidents and incidents

 * On 21 December 1999, Cubana de Aviación Flight 1216, a Cubana de Aviación McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 (F-GTDI) on lease from AOM on an international non-scheduled passenger flight from Havana (José Martí International Airport) suffered a landing accident at Guatemala City (La Aurora Airport), Guatemala. The aircraft overran runway 19 and continued down a steep slope before coming to rest in a residential area. 8 of the 296 passengers and 8 of the 18 crew as well as 2 people on the ground were killed and the aircraft was written off. The Guatemalan Dirección General de Aeronáutica Civil investigated the accident.