
Suva, Fiji: The Civil Aviation Authority of Fiji (CAAF) has ordered Sunflower Aviation to shut down its operations after the company’s maintenance certificate expired and was not renewed. The Ministry of Tourism and Civil Aviation confirmed yesterday that Sunflower Aviation’s Aircraft Maintenance Organisation Certificate issued under Air Navigation Regulations Part 145C expired at midnight on November 22, 2025, and was not renewed following regulatory findings.
According to the ministry, a comprehensive CAAF assessment identified “significant and recurring safety non-compliances,” prompting the regulator to withhold renewal. The ministry said safety remains the Government’s top priority and cannot be compromised under any circumstances.
JAG chief executive and managing director Captain Tim Joyce has strongly disputed the Government’s position, labelling the public safety narrative “misleading” and rejecting the claim that Sunflower Aviation posed any risk. He insisted that the issue centred on a technical documentation matter rather than a safety breach, and warned that the decision would unnecessarily affect students, families, and staff.
“We respectfully reject the claims and implications contained in the press release and assert that the public was misled about safety risks,” Captain Joyce said. He added that Sunflower Aviation had never operated an unsafe aircraft, nor had CAAF ever issued a finding that any aircraft maintained by the company was improperly released to service.
CAAF stood by its determination, stating it acted independently under its legal mandate, and would consider any licence application only after all deficiencies were corrected, verified, and brought into full regulatory compliance.
Captain Joyce, however, argued that CAAF’s decision was rooted in its interpretation of a paperwork technicality involving the release-to-service documents of a Cessna 172 used for private flight training at Nausori Airport. He said the aircraft had been cleared by a fully licensed CAAF-approved engineer and remained airworthy.
“The minister’s statement omitted the actual grounds claimed by CAAF,” he said. “The decision was based solely on CAAF’s interpretation of a documentation technicality. The aircraft passed all required maintenance procedures and remains fully airworthy. Therefore, the issue is administrative, not a safety concern.”
JAG further claimed that the abrupt non-renewal without a show-cause notice, corrective action pathway, or reasonable warning breached basic principles of natural justice, due process, legitimate expectation, and proportionality.
The company also criticised the ministry’s public comments, saying they created an inaccurate impression of danger. “The Ministry’s press release wrongly equated a technical dispute with public hazard. No unsafe aircraft were ever operated by Sunflower Aviation, and no finding of that nature exists. The public deserves truthful, evidence-based communication, not vague insinuations of risk,” the group said.



















