Aircraft engineers from the MAF support base in Mareeba, Australia, enable Mission Aviation Fellowship’s Timor-Leste programme to keep serving isolated communities.
An international team of engineers have travelled to Timor-Leste to carry out maintenance that helps MAF to keep providing hope, help and healing across the nation.
The workers came from Australia to the Timorese capital Dili to complete routine inspections of the two aircraft and later for unscheduled maintenance.
Without their efforts, MAF’s planes could sit idle on the ground, which could halt the vital medevac service which brings patients from remote towns quickly and safely to the national hospital.
Captain Jan Klassen, MAF pilot and Safety Manager, emphasised the impact of bringing MAF aircraft engineers from Australia to help with maintenance in Timor-Leste.
MAF in Timor-Leste, is supported by the regional resources of the MAF Australian Aircraft Maintenance Organisation with bases in Mareeba and Arnhem Land.
MAF aircraft engineer John Hermanus arrived in Dili in February to complete the 100 hourly inspections on two GA8 aircraft, VH-MAH and VH-MAF.
Then in March, MAF engineers John Hermanus, Jason Job, and Josh Todd came again to Timor-Leste on a mission to carry out unscheduled maintenance on one of the aircraft.
Captain Klassen, from Germany, explained how the role of aircraft engineers is crucial to help MAF provide medevac and charter flights to link people from remote communities such as Atauro, Vikeke and Same with the capital Dili.
“Aircraft maintenance is very important because it can help us provide life-saving flights to rescue people who need emergency evacuations in remote communities to get further treatment at the national hospital of Guido Valadares in Dili, the only national hospital in the country,” he said.
Air transportation plays a pivotal role in Timor-Leste by overcoming the barriers of mountainous terrain, rough roads and long distance.
Carl Bengtsson, from the Maintenance Control team in Mareeba, said: “The engineers are minimising the down time of our aircraft so that they are ready to perform emergency medevacs and other flight requirements throughout the country.
With no local engineering resource available in Dili, the team from Mareeba respond to the call and promptly fly to Dili when aircraft have unscheduled maintenance issues.
In the two weeks following the maintenance mission, the aircraft VH-MAF completed no less than 10 medevacs, showing us the true importance of these engineer visits to keep MAF planes flying.