India’s Jet Airways and Saudi Arabia’s flynas strike codeshare deal to boost inter-city travel

The codeshare will help 6 million passengers who travel between Saudi Arabia and India for religious, tourism and business purposes. (Getty Images)
Updated 12 December 2018
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India’s Jet Airways and Saudi Arabia’s flynas strike codeshare deal to boost inter-city travel

  • Under the agreement, travelers will be able to use either airline for their trips between the two countries and on some domestic connections
  • Codeshare agreement will support close to 6 million passengers who travel between Saudi Arabia and India for religious tourism and business purposes

LONDON: The Indian airline Jet Airways has signed a codeshare agreement with Saudi Arabia’s budget airline flynas, which will improve the connectivity between major Indian and Saudi Arabian cities.
Under the agreement, travelers will be able to use either airline for their trips between the two countries and on some domestic connections.
Flights are on sale now with customers able to travel on codeshare flights from Tuesday.
“This partnership is an important step in-line with flynas’ expansion and development strategy. Through such agreements we aim to offer a continually improved service to our passengers by adding more travel routes and expanding our reach regionally and internationally, in particular to key markets such as India,” said flynas’ CEO, Bander Al-Mohanna.

 

Jet Airways will place its marketing code “9W” on flynas flights between Dammam and Jeddah and Riyadh. The code will also be placed on connections from those cities to the holy city of Madinah as well as Gizan, Gassim, Taif and Abha. This will enable Jet Airways customers to fly into one Saudi city and leave via another.
Flynas will place its marketing code XY on Jet Airways’ international flights connecting Jeddah to Mumbai, Riyadh to Mumbai and Delhi. It will also cover flights from Dammam to Mumbai and Delhi.
Flynas will place its code on some destinations within Jet Airways domestic network, via Mumbai to Delhi, Kochi, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Lucknow as well as via Delhi to Bengaluru, Lucknow, Chennai and Kochi.
The codeshare agreement will support close to 6 million passengers who travel between Saudi Arabia and India for religious tourism and business purposes, said Marnix Fruitema, executive vice president — commercial, Jet Airways.
“Saudi Arabia is the second largest international travel market to and from India,” he said in a statement.

FASTFACTS

Saudi Arabia is the second largest international travel market to and from India.


US pump prices surge as Iran war upends global energy supply

Updated 07 March 2026
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US pump prices surge as Iran war upends global energy supply

  • Fuel prices jump over 10 percent as oil prices surge
  • Analysts predict further price rises due to market conditions

MARIETTA/NEW YORK : US retail gasoline and diesel prices are soaring as the US-Israel war with Iran constrains oil and fuel exports, which could be a political test for President Donald Trump’s Republican Party ahead of midterm ​elections in November.
Fuel prices jumped more than 10 percent this week as oil rose above $90 a barrel, its highest in years, adding pain at the pump for consumers already strained by inflation.
Trump on Thursday shrugged off higher gasoline prices in an interview with Reuters, saying “if they rise, they rise.”
The president had vowed to lower energy prices and unleash US oil and gas drilling during his second term, but much of his tenure has been marked by volatility and uncertainty amid shifts in policies like tariffs and geopolitical turmoil.
The US is the world’s largest oil producer. It is a major exporter but also imports millions of barrels a day since it is the world’s largest oil consumer.
As of Friday, the national average prices for regular gasoline stood at $3.32 a gallon, up 11 percent from a ‌week ago and ‌the highest since September 2024, according to data from the motorists association AAA. Diesel was at $4.33, ​up ‌15 percent ⁠from a week ​ago, ⁠surging to the highest since November 2023.

Midwest, south feel the pinch
US motorists in parts of the Midwest and the South, including states that supported Trump, have seen some of the steepest increases in fuel costs since the conflict in Iran started.
In Georgia, a swing state, average retail gasoline prices rose 40.1 cents a gallon over the past week, according to fuel tracking site GasBuddy.
Andrenna McDaniel, a health care insurance worker in South Fulton, Georgia, said she was surprised to see prices skyrocket overnight.
“They jumped up so quickly,” she said on Friday, adding that she does not agree with the war at all.
McDaniel, a Democrat, said that for now she is only driving for the most important things, ⁠and feels lucky that she works from home so she does not have to drive as ‌much as other people do. Georgia voted for Donald Trump in the 2024 election.
Trump voter ‌Richard Soule, 69, a US Air Force veteran and a retired firefighter, said ​a little pain at the pump is worth Trump’s efforts to ‌protect America.
“When President Trump went in there and bombed out their nuclear, and they just thumbed their nose at it, ‌I believe he did the right thing at the right time,” Soule said on Friday as he filled up his Ford F-150 truck in Marietta, Georgia.
Other states, including Indiana and West Virginia have seen prices rise by 44.3 cents and 43.9 cents, respectively.

Prices may rise further
More pain may be on the way, analysts said, as oil prices continue to trend upward. On Friday, US oil futures settled at $90.90 a barrel, up nearly $10 and ‌the biggest single-day rise since April 2020.
“Given current market conditions, the national average price of gasoline could climb toward $3.50 to $3.70 per gallon in the coming days if oil continues rising and supply ⁠disruptions persist,” GasBuddy analyst Patrick De ⁠Haan said.
The disruptions in the Middle East and the Strait of Hormuz, a key trade conduit, have boosted demand for US oil abroad, which in turn has driven up prices for domestic refiners too.
“The US has weaned itself off of its dependence on Middle Eastern crude, but obviously Asian refineries, and to a lesser extent, European refineries have not,” Denton Cinquegrana, chief oil analyst with OPIS. “That’s what you’re seeing happen in the spot market, because the demand for US exports rise, and so the price rise.”
Seasonal factors could add further pressure. Gasoline prices typically go up in the spring and peak in the summer due to higher gasoline demand and production of summer-blend gasoline, which is more costly to produce. Diesel fuel saw an even more aggressive jump since Iran began retaliating against US and Israeli strikes, significantly disrupting shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.
Global diesel inventories have remained in tight supply due to heavy demand for heating and power generation during a prolonged winter in the US and other parts of the world and a structural tightness of refining ​capacity. Sticker prices of everything from food to furniture go up ​when the cost of diesel goes up, as the fuel is mainly used in freight transportation, manufacturing, agriculture, and global shipping, analysts said.
“In a world where buzzword seems to be ‘affordability’, that is certainly not going to help,” Cinquegrana said.