Airlines including Lufthansa cautiously plan to resume some Middle East flights

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Updated 16 January 2025
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Airlines including Lufthansa cautiously plan to resume some Middle East flights

  • Airlines remain cautious and watchful before re-entering the region in full
  • Air France-KLM said its flights between Paris and Beirut will be suspended until Jan. 31

DUBLIN: Germany’s Lufthansa Group is set to resume flights to and from Tel Aviv in Israel from Feb. 1 and Wizz Air restarted its London to Tel Aviv route on Thursday, the companies said following a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas.
Many Western carriers canceled flights to swaths of the Middle East in recent months, including Beirut and Tel Aviv, as conflict tore across the region. Airlines also avoided Iraqi and Iranian airspace out of fear of getting accidentally caught in drone or missile warfare.
Wizz Air also resumed flights to Amman, Jordan starting on Thursday from London Luton airport.
Lufthansa Group carriers Brussels Airlines, Eurowings, Austrian Airlines and Swiss were included in Lufthansa’s decision to resume flights to Tel Aviv.
Ryanair said it was hoping to run a full summer schedule to and from Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv in an interview with Reuters last week, before the ceasefire deal was announced.
In the wake of the fall of the Assad regime in Syria, Turkish Airlines said it would start flights to Damascus, the Syrian capital, on Jan. 23, with three flights per week.

CAUTIOUS RETURN
But airlines remain cautious and watchful before re-entering the region in full, they said.
Air France-KLM said its operations to and from Tel Aviv remain suspended until Jan. 24, while its flights between Paris and Beirut will be suspended until Jan. 31.
“The operations will resume on the basis of an assessment of the situation on the ground,” it said in a statement.
The suspension of Lufthansa flights to and from Tehran up to and including Feb. 14 remains in place and the airline will not fly to Beirut in Lebanon up to and including Feb. 28, it said.


Drone attack hits WFP aid trucks in Sudan’s North Kordofan, UN says

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Drone attack hits WFP aid trucks in Sudan’s North Kordofan, UN says

  • Sudan has been gripped by conflict since April 2023, displacing millions and pushing large parts of the population toward famine

NEW YORK: A drone attack struck trucks transporting food aid for displaced families in Sudan’s North Kordofan state on Friday, killing at least one person and injuring several others, the United Nations said.

The trucks, contracted by the World Food Programme were travelling from Kosti to deliver food to starved, displaced people near the state capital, El Obeid, when they were hit, according to a statement by the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sudan, Denise Brown.

The attack caused the vehicles to catch fire, destroying food supplies intended for humanitarian response, Brown said.

She said she encountered the aftermath of the strike a few hours later while leaving El Obeid.

“This follows another drone strike earlier this week near a WFP facility in Yabus, Blue Nile State, in which a staff member was injured,” Brown said, adding to concerns over the safety of humanitarian operations in the country.

Humanitarian personnel, assets and supplies must be protected at all times, she said, warning that attacks on aid operations undermine efforts to reach people facing acute hunger and displacement.

Sudan has been gripped by conflict since April 2023, displacing millions and pushing large parts of the population toward famine. Aid agencies say insecurity and attacks on humanitarian convoys continue to severely restrict access to vulnerable communities.

Brown stressed that safe and unimpeded humanitarian access remains critical to ensure assistance reaches those most in need across Sudan.