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Pax out of pocket as SAX delays refunds

22 Aug 2018 - by Sarah Robertson
Comments | 0

MORE than six weeks

after South African

Express was grounded,

many clients and agents are

still waiting for their promised

refunds, leaving frustrated

clients out of pocket.

Shaun Beckley, area sales

manager Africa and Indian

Ocean for GTA, said he

cancelled a SAX East London

ticket on May 31 and was told

that the refund would take 21

working days.

“I have not received any

funds to date,” he said.

“When I follow up they advise

that they are waiting for

management signatures.”

Nawahl Isaacs, consultant

at Club Travel Tygervalley,

said its office’s SAX refunds

had not been received. She

said so many of Club Travel’s

refunds were still outstanding

that the consortium was now

chasing these with SAX from

a head office level.

Karen Foley, manager at

Harvey World Travel Highway,

said she had received one

refund from SAX but other

refunds submitted on the

same day had not been

processed.

However, some agents have

received their refunds. For

example, Amanda Harrod, of

Sure Astral Travel, advised

that its refunds were received

in the June BSP and Christo

Hauptfleisch, director of XL

Wild Travel, contacted TNW

this week to advise that its

refunds had just come in.

Otto de Vries, ceo of

Asata, said this situation

demonstrated the double

standards that existed

between Iata’s airline and

agency operating procedures.

He said Iata was quick to

hold agency funds to protect

clients against potential agent

default, but that there were no

similar requirements in place

to safeguard clients against

airlines going bust or failing to

timeously deliver on promised

refunds. He urged Iata to

implement reciprocal airline

risk-management processes

in the industry as soon as

possible.

A recent update on the

SAX website confirms that

the Civil Aviation Authority

has approved the airline’s

Corrective Action Plans to

resolve its level 1 and level 2

findings, and reinstated the

airline’s Aircraft Maintenance

Organisation approvals on

June 22. SAX is embarking on

the re-certification process on

its Air Operator’s Certificate,

including verification of the

airworthiness of aircraft.

TNW approached SAX to find

out what turnaround times

were to be expected. The

airline had not responded

at the time of going to print

but undertook to make a

statement in a few days. 

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