http://thejakartaglobe.com/home/for-executives-of-riau-air-hopes-are-in-the-toilet/351935

January 10, 2010 
Putri Prameshwari & Antara

 
Teguh Trianto, chairman of Riau Airlines, shows staff how it's done as he 
cleans the toilet on one of the company's Fokker-50 aircraft shortly after it 
landed in Pekanbaru on Friday night. (Antara Photo/FB Anggoro)

For Executives of Riau Air, Hopes Are in the Toilet


Struggling low-cost carrier Riau Airlines has come up with a novel way to 
remind cabin crew that cleanliness is next to godliness - getting the company 
chairman and other senior executives to clean toilets aboard its planes once a 
week. 

Chairman Teguh Triyanto said that as of this month, senior staff would be 
required to help keep the lavatories of the company's aircraft spic and span 
every Friday. 

"We are trying to demonstrate that in addition to safety, passenger comfort is 
our No. 1 priority," Teguh said. 

He added that he hoped the scheme would motivate the company's rank-and-file to 
keep the aircraft clean and thereby keep passengers happy. 

Teguh said the toilet was an integral part of the plane, but cabin crew often 
overlooked its cleanliness. On Friday, Teguh climbed into a Fokker-50 shortly 
after it landed in Pekanbaru from Tanjung Pinang and started cleaning the 
lavatory. 

Along with 10 other directors and managers, Teguh, recently appointed the 
company's chairman, cleaned the toilet as well as other areas on the plane. 

Riau Airlines, based in Pekanbaru, serves routes in the western part of 
Indonesia using a fleet of five Fokker-50s and two British Aerospace 146s. It 
also offers smaller aircraft for charter. 

Riau Airlines discontinued its flight linking Pekanbaru with Jakarta on 
Wednesday due to ongoing losses. Teguh was quoted by Antara as saying that once 
the airline had acquired a larger aircraft it would reopen the route. "For now, 
we are only focusing on short routes in Sumatra," he said. 

The route opened in December 2008 with two Avro RJ-100 aircraft with a capacity 
of 108 seats each. In the future, the airline would focus on commercial flights 
from Riau to Sumatra, he said. Riau Airlines also recently opened a new route 
to Jambi and plans a route to Palembang in the near future. 

As air transportation has grown rapidly in the archipelago in the wake of the 
economic reforms since the late 1990s, carriers have been pressured to compete 
to get the most passengers by slashing fares. Travelers' comfort and safety 
have been often overlooked as a result. 

Eko Roesni, secretary general of People for Indonesia Air Transportation, said 
airline liberalization should have come with much tighter regulations. 

"And the regulations must prioritize passengers because without them the 
industry would not be in business," he said.

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