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There are some flights to the Middle East that have resumed but there is still disruption.

Some airlines have resumed flights to certain parts of the Middle East, as diplomatic efforts intensify to resolve the conflict that erupted after the U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran. However, many carriers continue to suspend flights, causing global travel disruptions.

The following is a list of the current status of flights by alphabetical order.

AEGEAN AIRLINES

Thessaloniki-Tel Aviv flights were cancelled by Greece's largest airline until June 26. Erbil, Baghdad and Dubai flights are all cancelled until September 30.

AIRBALTIC

AirBaltic, a Latvian airline, has canceled flights to Tel Aviv and Dubai until the 28th of June.

AIR CANADA

Canadian Airlines has cancelled all flights to Tel Aviv, Dubai and Abu Dhabi until October 24.

AIR EUROPA

Spanish Airlines has canceled flights to Tel Aviv from June 28 until now.

Air France-KLM has suspended flights from Tel Aviv to Dubai until June 30, and flights between Beirut and Beirut up until July 5.

KLM has suspended flights from Riyadh to Dammam, Dubai and Dammam until August 9.

CATHAY PACIFIC

Hong Kong Airlines has suspended its flights to Dubai and Riyadh through August 31.

The U.S. carrier suspended service for the Atlanta-Tel Aviv routes until December 18. The airline plans to resume New York JFK-Tel Aviv flights in September, while Boston-Tel Aviv flights, scheduled for late October launch, have been postponed until further notice.

FINNAIR

Finnair has cancelled all Doha flights up until October 2 and continues to avoid the airspace over Iraq, Iran Syria, and Israel. In October, it will resume Dubai flights that are only operated during the winter.

British Airways, owned by IAG, delayed the resume of flights to Doha and Riyadh to August 8th. Flights from Amman, Dubai, Tel Aviv and Bahrain will be paused for the rest of the summer until October 25. It plans to reduce the number of flights to Dubai, Doha and Riyadh to just one per day when it resumes, while dropping Jeddah from its list of destinations.

JAPAN AIRLINES

Japan Airlines has suspended its scheduled Tokyo-Doha and Doha-Tokyo flight until August 31, and Doha-Tokyo until September 1.

Polish Airlines has canceled flights to Riyadh and Beirut until 30 June. LOT will begin operating its winter route from Dubai in October.

LUFTHANSA GROUP

Lufthansa has announced that it will resume Tel Aviv flights as soon as July 1. ITA Airways also confirmed they would resume Tel Aviv flights as of July 1. SWISS delayed the return of flights until August, while Brussels Airlines suspended its operations until October 24.

The suspension of Dubai flights by SWISS and Lufthansa will continue until September 13th.

Airline companies including Lufthansa and SWISS have suspended flights from Abu Dhabi to Amman, Beirut Dammam, Riyadh Erbil Muscat and Tehran.

Eurowings, a low-cost airline, has suspended flights from Tel Aviv to July 9, Beirut to June 30, Erbil to June 30, and Dubai to Abu 'Dhabi until October 24.

ITA Airways also extended its suspension of flights to Riyadh and Dubai until July 31.

MALAYSIA AIRLINES

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

NORWEGIAN AIR

Low-cost carrier has delayed its planned launch of Tel Aviv and Beirut indefinitely and no new dates have been determined.

ROYAL MAROC

Moroccan airline announced that flights to Doha have been cancelled until 30 June.

SINGAPORE Airlines

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

TURKISH AIRLINES

SunExpress, Turkish Airlines joint venture with Lufthansa has cancelled flights to Dubai until June 30, and to Bahrain, Beirut, and Erbil up until July 14.

WIZZ AIR

Low-cost airlines have suspended flights from Europe to Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Amman until mid-September. (Compiled by Josephine Mason and Jamie Freed. Elviira Olenska, Tiago Branao, Agnieszka Oleskna, Bernadette HOG, Alexander Klyve Gudbrandsen, Romolo TOSIANI, and Bernadette Hogg. Matt Scuffham and Alexander Smith edited by Milla Nissi - Prussak, Jonathan Ananda and Louise Heavens, and Sanjeev Miklani.

(source: Reuters)