Hindustan Times (Patiala)

17 countries, 612 flights in phase 4

- HT Correspond­ent and PTI letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: Air India, IndiGo and Go Air will conduct 612 flights between July 3 and July 15 under the fourth phase of the Vande Bharat Mission. Air India will fly 114 flights while IndiGo and GoAir will operate 457 and 41 flights respective­ly as part of the evacuation mission.

Under the fourth phase of the mission, Air India will operate 114 flights to India from 17 countries, Canada, the US, the UK, Kenya, Sri Lanka, Philippine­s, Kyrgyzstan, Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, Thailand, South Africa, Russia, Australia, Myanmar, Japan, Ukraine and Vietnam, according to the airline’s document accessed by the news agency PTI. Air India’s chartered flights are scheduled to be operated between July 3 and 15, the aforementi­oned official document stated. It said the airline will fly 31 flights from the US and 19 flights from the UK. Earlier, a document of Air India had said that it will operate a total of 170 flights to and from 17 countries.

Private airlines like IndiGo and GoAir will also play a major role in the fourth phase of the mission.In a tweet on Sunday evening, the Civil Aviation Ministry said, “Private Airlines will have significan­t participat­ion in Phase-4 of VBM. Among others, IndiGo will operate 238 flights from Qatar & 219 flights from Kuwait; while GoAir will operate 41 flights from Kuwait. Number of pvt carriers, flights & destinatio­ns likely to increase.”

The government started the mission to evacuate stranded Indians from abroad on May 6. Scheduled internatio­nal passenger flights have been suspended in India since March 23 due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Air India is scheduled to operate 272 chartered flights in the third phase, which began on June 10 and will end on July 4. The first phase started from May 7 and ended on May 16.

The US Department of Transporta­tion announced on June 22 that it has barred Air India from operating chartered flights between India and the United States from July 22 without its prior approval, in an apparent retaliatio­n to the Indian government for not allowing American carriers to operate between the two countries.On June 23, the aviation ministry said that it was considerin­g establishi­ng “individual bilateral bubbles” with the US, the UK, Germany and France, allowing airlines of each country in the pact to operate internatio­nal passenger flights.

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