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Airline cancellations in response to Middle East conflict

Middle Eastern carriers increased capacity following the Iran War, and airlines outside the Gulf have rerouted flights between Europe & Asia away from major hubs within the region.

The latest flight information is listed below alphabetically.

AEGEAN AIRLINES

On May 21, Greece's largest airline will resume flights from Heraklion to Tel Aviv, Rhodes and Larnaca. Thessaloniki-Tel Aviv flights are cancelled up until June 26.

Flights to Riyadh, Amman and Erbil will resume on May 21. Flights to Dubai will be cancelled until June 29. Erbil, Baghdad and Baghdad flights are also cancelled until July 2.

AEROFLOT

The Russian flag carrier announced that it will?resume? flights to the United Arab Emirates as of June 1.

AIRBALTIC

AirBaltic, a Latvian airline, has announced that flights to Tel Aviv are cancelled until the 28th of June. Dubai flights are cancelled until 24 October.

AIR CANADA

The Canadian carrier has canceled flights to Tel Aviv, Dubai and Abu Dhabi until September 7.

AIR EUROPA

Spanish Airlines has cancelled all flights to Tel Aviv from June 9 until now.

AIR FRANCE-KLM

Air France has suspended flights to Riyadh, Riyadh and Beirut until May 27, and Tel Aviv and Dubai until May 19

KLM suspends flights to Riyadh Dammam, and Dubai until 28 June.

CATHAY PACIFIC

Hong Kong Airlines has suspended all flights to Dubai, Riyadh and cargo services until May 31, and until June 30, respectively. The airline plans to operate all scheduled flight beyond June.

The U.S. carrier plans to resume New York JFK-Tel Aviv flights from September 6 and has extended the suspension of service for Atlanta-Tel Aviv until November 30. The airline said that the launch of its Boston-Tel Aviv flight, scheduled for late October, has been postponed until further notice.

EL AL ISRAEL AIRLINES

All flights to Dubai have been cancelled until 31 May.

FINNAIR

Finnair has cancelled all Doha flights up until July 2 and is continuing to avoid the airspace over Iraq, Iran Syria, and Israel. The airline will not resume Dubai flights until October.

British Airways, owned by IAG, will reduce flights to the Middle East once services resume. Jeddah is no longer a destination.

From July 1, it plans to reduce the number of flights to Dubai, Doha, and Tel Aviv from two daily flights to just one. Riyadh will be reduced from two daily flights down to just one starting in mid-May. The changes will be in effect until the end of the summer season on October 24. One Dubai service will restart on?October 16

Iberia Express, the Spanish low-cost carrier of IAG, has cancelled all flights to Tel Aviv until May 31.

JAPAN AIRLINES

Japan Airlines has suspended its scheduled Tokyo-Doha and Doha-Tokyo flight until June 30, and Doha-Tokyo until July 1.

The Polish airline has suspended flights from Tel Aviv to June 12. The airline also cancelled flights from March 31 until June 27 to Beirut and Riyadh. LOT will operate its winter route from Dubai to Riyadh in October.

LUFTHANSA GROUP

Austrian Airlines plans to restart flights to Tel Aviv on June 1. SWISS, ITA Airways, and Lufthansa plan to resume flights in July. Brussels Airlines suspended its operations until October 24,

ITA Airways, SWISS and Lufthansa will continue to suspend their flights to Dubai through September 13.

Lufthansa has suspended flights to Abu Dhabi, Amman and Beirut. SWISS has also suspended flights to Dammam and Riyadh. Erbil, Muscat, and Tehran have been suspended until October 24.

Eurowings, a low-cost airline, has suspended its flights to Tel Aviv and Beirut until July 9, Erbil and Dubai until June 22, and Amman and Abu Dhabi until October 24.

ITA Airways has also extended its suspension of flights to Riyadh until June 30.

MALAYSIA AIRLINES

From June 2, the Malaysian airline will resume limited service to Doha.

NORWEGIAN AIR

The low-cost carrier has delayed the launch of its Tel Aviv?and Beirut'services until June 15

PEGASUS

Pegasus Airlines, Turkey's national airline, has cancelled all flights to Iran, Iraq Kuwait, Bahrain, Dammam Riyadh Abu Dhabi Sharjah until June 1.

QANTAS, Australia's flag-carrier, is increasing flights to Rome and Paris in response to a surge in demand for European destinations. The number of flights to Paris is increasing from three to five per week. Perth-Singapore will also increase from daily service to 10 per week. A new schedule will be implemented gradually for flights starting in mid-April. It will run through late July.

QATAR AIRWAYS

On May 13, the Qatari airline announced that it would resume operations in Abu Dhabi. The airline will also expand its international flight network from June 16 to include more than 150 destinations.

ROYAL MAROC

Moroccan airline said that flights to Doha and Dubai were cancelled until the end of June.

SINGAPORE Airlines

In response to increased demand, the carrier has extended its Singapore-Dubai flight suspension until August 2. It also added services on Singapore-London Gatwick (late March) and Singapore-Melbourne (late March-October 24).

TURKISH AIRLINES

SunExpress, Turkish Airlines joint venture with Lufthansa has cancelled flights until June 30, including to Dubai, Bahrain and Erbil.

WIZZ AIR

Low-cost airlines will resume their flights to Tel Aviv from May 28, but flights to Dubai and Abu Dhabi, as well as flights to Amman in Jordan remain suspended until the middle of September. All flights to Medina have been suspended permanently. (Compiled by Josephine Mason and Jamie Freed. Elviira Loma, Tiago Branao, Agnieszka Olenka, Bernadette HOG, Boleslaw LaSocki, Romolo Tosiani, and Bernadette Hogg. Matt Scuffham and Alexander Smith edited by Susan Fenton, Milla Nissi, Milla Nissi, Milla Nissi, Milla Nissi, Milla Nissi-Prussak.

(source: Reuters)