The Star Malaysia

World first

Air India crosses Saudi airspace to Israel.

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TEL AVIV: Air India launched the first scheduled service to Israel to be allowed to cross Saudi airspace, a sign of a behindthes­cenes improvemen­t in ties between the Arab kingdom and the Jewish state.

Flight AI 139 landed at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion airport about 30 minutes after its scheduled arrival time of 7.45pm GMT.

“This is a historic moment,” Israeli Transport Minister Yisrael Katz said on the tarmac as the Boeing Dreamliner rolled to a halt.

“It is the first time that there is an official connection between the state of Israel and Saudi Arabia,” he said in Hebrew.

Tourism Minister Yariv Levin was also there to welcome the flight. “A new era has begun,” he said. There will now be three flights weekly in each direction, ending a decadeslon­g Saudi ban on the use of its airspace for commercial flights to Israel.

Israel’s national carrier El Al currently operates an India service to Mumbai that takes a detour over the Red Sea to avoid flying over Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Saudi Arabia and Israel have no official diplomatic relations, like much of the Arab world. Egypt and Jordan are the only two Arab countries with peace treaties with Israel.

The flight approval comes after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described relations with the Arab world as the “best ever”, with common concerns over Iran drawing them closer together.

Leaders of Arab countries have not publicly made similar comments, though that does not necessaril­y mean they dispute Netanyahu’s claim.

They face sensitivit­ies within their own countries, where the Jewish state is often viewed with intense hostility.

Israeli analyst Jonathan Spyer said that the Saudi concession showed that positive signals were being sent despite the lack of an IsraeliPal­estinian peace treaty, long seen as a prerequisi­te for relations between the Jewish state and the Arab world.

“I think that what this shows is even in the absence of that you can have small gestures that are of real meaning,” Spyer, director of Israel’s Rubin Centre for Research in Internatio­nal Affairs, said. — AFP

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