By MALUM NALU
As Papua New Guinea
celebrated 35 years of independence on September 16, the small Papua New Guinea community in Dubai, United Arab Emirates,
also got together for a mumu for
their motherland.
They included the small group of PNG pilots and their
families based in UAE, as well as PNG women married to expatriates and now
living there.
Among this small group of nationalists was Captain Timothy
Narara, who only three days earlier, had made history by being the first Papua
New Guinean to be licensed to fly the Airbus A380, the largest passenger
airliner in the world, for Emirates Airlines.
Captain Timothy Narara in the cockpit of the Airbus A380 |
Ironically, his elder brother Granger, who is vice president
of flight operations with another UAE airline Etihad, was the first Papua New
Guinean to fly the A380 – which pilots call ‘The Beast’ – a couple of years ago
but that was only a trial test flight with Airbus.
Timothy Narara has gone a step further than big brother by
being licensed to fly passengers on the A380 to anywhere in the world.
An Emirates Airlines A380 which Captain Timothy Narara is flying |
“The first flight I did was on the 13th of
September,” he tells me on Skype from Abu
Dhabi on Wednesday evening.
“I went to Heathrow
Airport in London.
“I started the conversion course for the A380 on the 15th
of August this year.
“Because I’ve been flying Airbuses for the last 12 years,
the conversion to the A380 only took me about a month and a half.
“If you’ve flown an Airbus before, the philosophy is pretty
much the same.
“I started the conversion course on August 15th and finished
on September 10th.
“On the first flight which I did, there was an instructor
with me.
“I went to Bangkok on
September 20th and on the 29th of September 29th,
did my final ‘check’ flight to Toronto.
“Once you complete your ‘check’ flights, you are by yourself
and can fly anywhere in the world with a first officer.
“I went to Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia,
yesterday (Tuesday, October 5).
“My next flight in a couple of days is when I go to Beijing.”
The boy from Dobu, Milne
Bay province, now aged 45, tells me
that he should never have become a pilot in the first place, as he graduated as
a second lieutenant from the PNG
Defence Force
Academy in Lae in
November 1984 as an infantry officer.
Timothy Narara (right) with fellow PNGDF pilot Eddie Nigea beside an Arava |
“I graduated from the Defence Academy
as an infantry officer,” he laughs.
“Later on, I changed course, because there was an
opportunity to become a pilot.
“I went to Melbourne
for a course, I was lucky, I passed, and I stuck to that.
“There was an opportunity and I took it!”
Timothy Narara was born in Madang Hospital
in November 1964, when his father was working there at the power station.
The family then moved to Kudjip in the Western Highlands
shortly after as the father got a job with the Nazarene mission hydro station
and Narara went to school in Banz until 1973 when the family moved back to
Esa’ala in Milne Bay province.
“I completed primary School at Esa’ala primary school and
continued grade 7 to 10 at Wesley High School on Fergusson
Island, completing year 10 in 1980,
then did year 11 and 12 at Sogeri
National High
School.
“I joined the PNGDF after completing year 12 in 1982.
“I was moved to Igam Barracks in Lae to do officers’ training
at the PNG Defence Academy
and successfully obtained a commission as a second lieutenant in November 1984.
“ I then was fortunate enough to get selected to attend a
pilots’ course sponsored by the defence cooperation programme with Australia, and was sent down to Melbourne in 1985 for 12
months, returning to PNG rated on the
Nomad aircraft in December 1986, and
shortly after that started flying the IAI Arava.
“In 1987, I attended an instructor’s course in Australia which was completed and followed by a
year of instructing at the RAAF Flight Training School
in Point Cook, Australia.
“The Bougainville crisis was in full swing by this time so I
returned to PNG in December 1990 and was deployed to Bougainville
in early 1991 with my RATS comrades.
“Flying in Bougainville was
one of the most-challenging times as we were often fatigued and under extreme
pressure from all the elements, be it environmental, human or combat-orientated.
Timothy Narara (left) and Paul Boga in an Iroquois helicopter in PNGDF flying days |
“The guys flew extremely well and we all came out pretty
much intact.
“I left the comforts of the military as a major in June 1994
and joined Air Niugini as a first officer on the F28 and later on got my
command on the Dash 8.
“In June 1998, I left Air Niugini and moved to the United Arab Emirates and joined my brother
Granger, at Emirates Airline, in the United Arab Emirates.
“ I started on the
Airbus A 310/A 300 as a first officer and at that time the airline only had
about 30 airplanes, all wide bodies, and flew to about 40 or 50 destinations.
“I got my command two and a half years later on the A330 and
also flew the A 340.
“To date Emirates has a fleet of 150 airplanes and growing,
comprising of B777-200, B777-200LR, B777-300, B777-300ER, A330-200, A340-300,
A340-500 and the A380-800.
“In September of 2010, I moved across to the A380-800 as a captain.
“The aircraft operates with a crew of two pilots and a total
of 24 cabin crew and can carry up to 517 passengers seating 14 first class, 76
business class and 427 economy class.
“It is the largest passenger aircraft in the world.
“To date Emirates has 12 A 80-800 aircraft and should have
15 by the end of the year.
“Deliveries will begin again towards the end of next year
until there are over 90 A380s.”
The good news for Papua New Guinea is that another
PNG pilot at Emirates Airlines, Goroka boy Captain Locklyn Sabumei, will next
month do the conversion to the A380.
Timothy’s elder brother, Granger, leads two other PNG pilots
at the other UAE airline company, Etihad, who are Captain Hans Pederson of
Bougainville (ex Air Niugini who flies the Boeing 777) and Captain Terry
Togumagoma of Milne Bay (ex PNGDF who flies the Airbus A330/340).
But for now, life of good for Timothy Narara and his wife
and Sogeri sweetheart Nellie, from Tufi in Nothern province, and their three
sons.
Batman...Captain Timothy 'Tico' Narara and wife Nellie in UAE |
“I want to do this for a couple of years and see how it
goes.
“I can never tell the future, however, I’d like to come back
to PNG someday, as I’m a citizen and I hold a PNG passport.”
Bravo Timothy,
ReplyDeleteAll the very best and more enjoyable flying. God bless you and family.
To MN,
Thank you for sharing this piece of good news from another son of Milne Bay and indeed PNG.
Best,
Mari
Malum, Great piece, Good on them, I personally know Terry (one name) Tagamogoma and he is a great guy.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed reading this. Keep up it up bro Timothy. You make us proud Papua New Guineans. Glad you are from Milne Bay and am proud of your archievements.God bless
ReplyDeleteKnow Tim and Terry Personally.....infact operated with them on Bougainville. What we lost as pilots have now made us proud as Papua new Guineans and flying our National Flag amongst the best.....thank you for that article
ReplyDeleteWonderful article, your brief story really inspired me. I am from Port Moresby and currently a private pilot flying in Australia, I wonder if the PNGDF still offer opportunities like that ....You think i could have a chance..Well.. Congratulations on your success Captain, God Bless..
ReplyDeleteHistory you created ever for PNG.This will be for years to date and a model for young PNGs ,encouraging to us.Congraculations Timothy Narara.
ReplyDeleteOn behalf of we Jiwakas of Waghi Valley,Banz and Kudjip we are also part and partial of your achievement because you grew up here.
To God be the Glory.
Moses Peter Tepra
Kudjip Nazarene Hospital
Jiwaka,PNG
Well done, Master Timothy. An inspirational story I can tell my Chinese students.
ReplyDeleteRose Chue
A story worth reading. Thank you MN for the piece, very inspirational.
ReplyDeleteThanks for that wonderful fuel which really ignites us as young aspirant to move on for what we want to archive as pilot....To you Captain Timothy, You are my inspiration and my hope....I am looking top to you....God bless
ReplyDeleteMet this awesome bloke back in 2008 at Napatana and we shared a few SP bottles together...thanks for inspiring me and many upcoming PNGean's in their respective fields...Stay Blessed!
ReplyDeleteReading this makes me so so proud as Papua New Guinean BRAVO Captain Nara...
ReplyDeleteso proud to be his fellow country man BRAVO Captain Nara...
ReplyDeleteTimothy
ReplyDeleteYour story is a great story for PNGeans. You are a real model. You are a great ambassador for PNG in UAE.
Head from my S/Science teacher, Mr Z Fuba about you and your elder brother since I was in High School. Now I can can read the story myself.
Thanks God bless you and your family there in UAE.