Airforces

(Steven Felgate) #1

22 // FEBRUARY 2018 #359 http://www.airforcesmonthly.com


NEWS Africa


Latest batch of Egyptian Rafales delivered Su-30K


arrives in


Angola
A FIRST Su-30K has
been spotted in Angola,
confirming that deliveries
of the aircraft have begun.
Two images began
to circulate on social
media on December
11, although it was
unclear if they showed
two different aircraft.
On February 12, 2014
it was confirmed that 12
former Indian Air Force
(IAF) Su-30Ks had been
sold to the Força Aérea
Nacional de Angola
(FANA, National Air
Force of Angola) under
a contract signed in
October the previous year.
Taken from storage at the
558 Aircraft Repair Plant
(ARZ) at Baranovichi in
Belarus, these are being
refurbished and upgraded
to Su-30KN standard.
The first was re-flown
at Baranovichi around
January 31 last year.
Angola is also
reported to be looking
at purchasing a further
six Su-30Ks from the
same source (see Angola
eyes more Su-30Ks,
September 2017, p22).

SAAF C-47TP in Exercise


Oxide in Réunion
A LARGE-SCALE Franco-
South African naval
exercise, Oxide, was held
for the first time since
2008 in Réunion from
November 24 to December
7 last year. Military
aviation assets from both
countries took part in a
previously predominantly
maritime event.
The South African Air
Force (SAAF) provided
a veteran C-47TP Turbo
Dakota from 35 Squadron
at Air Force Base
Ysterplaat, while French
involvement included

Armée de l’Air CN235Ms,
plus Aéronavale Lynx and
Panther helicopters.
The exercise included
maritime surveillance
operations, along with
parachute dropping.
Other scenarios included
interception of a drug-
trafficking vessel,
protection of friendly
shipping and resupply
at sea by air dropping
supplies. The next Oxide
exercise is due in 2020,
but a precise date or
location has yet to be
determined. Dave Allport

Final pair of


Senegalese


Mi-24Vs


delivered
A CONTRACT awarded
to Poland’s Wojskowe
Zaklady Lotnicze Nr 1
(WZL-1) overhaul facility
in Lódź to refurbish
three former Slovak Air
Force Mi-24V attack
helicopters for the Armée
de l’Air Sénégalaise
(Senegalese Air Force)
has been completed.
The final two helicopters,
6W-HCB (c/n 730813 ex
0813) and 6W-HCD (c/n
730833, ex 0833), were
loaded onto an An-124
transport and departed
from Lódź for Dakar-
Yoff on November 30.
The first, 6W-HCA (c/n
830708, ex 0708), was
airfreighted out of Lódź
on February 8 (see Three
ex-Slovak Mi-24s for
Senegal, January 2017,
p22). Senegal now has
an attack helicopter fleet
of three Mi-24Vs and two
Mi-35Ps. Dave Allport

Above: A SAAF/35 Squadron C-47TP on the ramp at Base
Aérienne 181 Sainte-Denis-Lt Roland Garros Airport, Réunion,
as French Air Force CN235M-300 197 ‘62-HE’ from ET 3/62
taxies out during Exercise Oxide. French MoD

Cameroon government Beech 350 delivery
A NEW Beechcraft King Air
350i has been acquired by
the Cameroon government.
The aircraft, TJ-XRL (c/n
FL-1109), arrived from
Paderborn, Germany, for
a fuel stop at Malta-Luqa
Airport during its delivery
flight on December 11. It
carried temporary ferry
registration N1109C, taped
over its Cameroon identity,
and had been registered
as such on December 2 to
Africair, of Miami, Florida.
The 350i had left the Beech
Factory Airfield in Wichita,
Kansas, on December 1
for Wichita-Eisenhower
Airport, remaining there

until December 8, when
it continued via Bangor
International, Maine, to
Goose Bay, Canada.
The next day the aircraft

continued via Keflavík,
Iceland, to Belfast
International, Northern
Ireland. It left Belfast for
Paderborn on December

10, continuing the next
day to Malta. No official
details of Cameroon’s order
for the aircraft have been
announced. Dave Allport

Above: New Cameroon government King Air 350i N1109C (TJ-XRL) lands in Malta for a fuel
stop during its delivery fl ight. Ruben Zammit

Above: Although not one of the latest deliveries, twin-seat EAF Rafale DM06 was one of three examples temporarily deployed
to Landivisiau air base in northern France in late October last year. Fabrice Geny
A FURTHER three Rafales
have been delivered to
the Egyptian Air Force
(EAF). All were single-seat
EM variants, comprising
EM06, EM07 and EM08,
which arrived in Egypt
on November 28.
They were flown from
Dassault’s facility at
Bordeaux-Mérignac,
France, via a fuel stop at
Base Aérienne 125 Istres-
Le Tubé to Gebel El Basur

Air Base. They were the
final EAF single-seaters to
be handed over, leaving
just two-seat Rafale DMs
remaining to be delivered.
Deliveries to the EAF,
initially of twin-seater
aircraft, began in 2015
when DM01, DM02 and
DM03 arrived on July 20
of that year, followed by
DM04, DM05 and DM06
on January 28, 2016. The
first single-seat aircraft,

EM01, EM02 and EM03,
did not arrive until April
4, 2017 with a further
two (EM04 and EM05)
following on July 26. With
the latest arrivals, total
deliveries have reached 14
aircraft (eight Rafale EM
and six Rafale DM). Just
ten two-seaters (DM07
to DM16) of the order
for 24 (16 two-seat and
eight single-seat) aircraft
remain to be delivered.

The type is operated by
the EAF’s 34 Squadron
‘Wild Wolves’ as part
of the 203rd Tactical
Fighter Wing ‘Storm’.
The first operational
mission by EAF Rafales
on the night of May 26-27,
2017, maintained air
superiority and provided
airborne protection
for air strikes against
so-called Islamic State
in Libya. Dave Allport
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