Zeev Tepper is a Charedi resident of the city of Elad, not far from Bnei Brak. He is also a qualified pilot, so when El Al announced on Sunday that due to "a shortage of qualified pilots" a flight crew could not be found to pilot the Prime Minister to Italy at the end of this week, he offered his services.
Prime Minister Netanyahu and his wife are due to fly to Italy on Thursday, to meet with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.
Israel's version of Air Force One has yet to take to the skies due to numerous setbacks; meanwhile, the prime minister must use commercial airlines for travel, and El Al is required to issue a tender each time its services are required. This time, the deadline for applications expired on Sunday afternoon with no bids by either pilots or flight crew.
"We are working to man this flight ... in accordance with company procedures, as we have done countless times before," El Al said in a statement. "Since its establishment, El Al has flown heads of state for important national missions and will continue to do so in the future, whenever required ... The issue of manning the prime minister's flight is yet to be resolved due to a shortage of qualified pilots in our Boeing 777 squadron, among other reasons."
In conversation with Israel National News, Tepper related that he is a lawyer by profession but has been flying for the past ten years and is now willing to fly the prime minister on a purely voluntary basis. He added that he considers it a national embarrassment that a prime minister who was democratically elected faces a refusal of El Al pilots to fly him when they should realize that it was a privilege to do so.
Later on Sunday evening, El Al announced that it had finally found a crew.
Fire them all. Like US airline strike of 1981
ReplyDeleteThe charedim were on target all along after all?
ReplyDeleteThe IDF is basically secularist politics
Traditional or religious soldiers get punished for minute infractions by comparison ?
They have to crack down hard
ReplyDeleteAs they used to term this-
An Altelena moment [in reverse]
Air Controllers strike.
ReplyDeletepardon
Great point except pilots that fly El Al are private and do not answer to the IDF, other than that it would be a great comment, except it makes no sense.
ReplyDeleteBarely.El Al is a national monopoly (even with the recent changes) During any minor crisis they promptly come under gov't control and they All must receive clearance
DeleteExcept that El Al relies on the government to keep it from going bankrupt. Wonder what will happen next time it asks for extra funds.
ReplyDelete