Kuwait international airport to resume commercial flights

Kuwait International Airport suspended operations for five months due to the coronavirus pandemic. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 31 July 2020
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Kuwait international airport to resume commercial flights

DUBAI: Kuwait’s international airport will resume commercial flights to 20 countries from August 1 in a three-stage re-opening, five months after it suspended operations due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Flights will initially cover 8 countries in the Middle East, including the UAE, Bahrain, Oman and Lebanon; six in Europe, including the UK, Germany and Switzerland; five in Asia, including Sri Lanka, Pakistan, India and the Philippines; and to Ethiopia as the lone African destination, Kuwait’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said in a statement.

The government’s three-stage re-opening took into account the importance of adhering to preventive and precautionary health measures to protect travelers as well as airport staff, state news agency KUNA said.

Each phase of restarting commercial flights will take six months.

The first phase, which starts Saturday, will have Kuwait International Airport operating at 30 percent capacity – meaning it will handle no more than 10,000 passengers and 100 flights a day.

The airport on second stage, which starts February 2021, will increase its capacity to 60 percent and will handle a maximum 20,000 passengers and 200 flights per day. The airport will then shift to full operations by August.

Protocols put into place would include random check for arrivals, submission of travel requirements for destination countries, strict online or phone booking for ticket reservations and mandatory health insurance coverage for citizens to cover the treatment of coronavirus infections.


Palestinians have right to live in peace in ‘own land’: pope

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Palestinians have right to live in peace in ‘own land’: pope

  • The two-state solution “remains the institutional framework that addresses the legitimate aspirations of both peoples. Instead, we unfortunately see escalating violence in the West Bank against Palestinian civilians, who have the right to live in peace on

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo XIV has lamented rising violence in the occupied West Bank and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, saying Palestinians had the right to live peacefully in their “own land.”

“Sadly, there has been an increase in violence in the West Bank against the Palestinian civilian population, which has the right to live in peace in its own land,” said the US pope, adding that civilians in Gaza also should be assured “a future of lasting peace and justice in their own land.”

During his annual meeting with diplomats accredited to the Vatican to exchange New Year greetings, the Pope said the “humanitarian suffering of civilians continues despite the ceasefire announced in October, adding to the hardships they have already endured.”

He added: The Holy See closely follows every diplomatic initiative aimed at ensuring a future of lasting peace and justice for Palestinians in Gaza, for all Palestinians, and for all Israelis.”

The two-state solution “remains the institutional framework that addresses the legitimate aspirations of both peoples. Instead, we unfortunately see escalating violence in the West Bank against Palestinian civilians, who have the right to live in peace on their land,” he said.

“War is back in vogue, and a zeal for war is spreading,” Pope Leo said, warning that the “weakness of multilateralism is a particular cause for concern.”

“A diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being replaced by a diplomacy based on force, by either individuals or groups of allies,” the pope said.