At a time when several European countries have embarked on the road to decontamination, airlines are gradually returning to service. In many parts of the world, this is happening slowly but surely. Here are the details for a few airlines:
Corsair resumes flights on June 18
Subject to developments in the health situation and government authorizations, the airline has decided to resume some of its flights. Departure is from Charles de Gaulle airport. Corsair has chosen to start with services to the French overseas departments.
Corsair also aims to resume flights to destinations such as Abidjan, Montreal and Mauritius as soon as possible. However, due to the health situation, flights to the United States will not resume any time soon.
Singapore Airlines And United resume activities in July
The pandemic has brought airline operations to a standstill. The latter have decided to resume their activities. Singapore Airlines and United, for example, have chosen July to resume service. Singapore Airlines plans to start with Barcelona, Amsterdam, Adelaide, Auckland and Melbourne. United, for its part, plans to resume service gradually, with the opening of routes to Hong Kong, Singapore, Seoul, Munich, Brussels, London and Tokyo.
ASL Airlines from Paris to Pau from June 10
To start with, the airline plans to operate four flights a week between Pau and Charles de Gaulle. June 10 has been set as the resumption date, with flights aboard 147-seat Boeing 737s. It should be noted that the company intends to comply with all the health measures taken by the government. The schedule is as follows: a flight (Charles de Gaulle-Pau) on Monday, with flights (Pau-Charles de Gaulle) scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Return flights from Paris are scheduled on the same days. In addition, a (Pau-Charles de Gaulle flight) is scheduled for Friday at 6.30pm.
Brussels Airlines resumes commercial flights on June 15
After a 12-week shutdown, the Belgian airline has decided when it will resume flying to 59 destinations. Depending on demand and the restrictions imposed by governments, it will put in place a fairly reduced summer program. Then, between June 15 and August 31, Brussels Airlines will ramp up to 59 destinations. These will be in Europe, Africa and America. In all, 33 countries will be served.
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