Arab News

Flydubai launches first scheduled Dubai-Tel Aviv flight

- AFP Dubai

Budget airline flydubai on Thursday launched direct flights to Tel Aviv, the first scheduled commercial service between the two cities, following the normalizat­ion of ties between the UAE and Israel.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be on hand for the arrival of the inaugural flight after its nearly four-hour trip, his spokesman said.

“PM Netanyahu will attend this morning the welcoming ceremony for the first @flydubai commercial flight that will arrive at Ben- Gurion Internatio­nal Airport,” Ofir Gendelman said in a tweet. “These are the fruits of peace Dear Emirati tourists, welcome to Israel!“

The UAE in September signed a landmark US-brokered deal to formalize relations with Israel, the first such agreement by an Arab state in the Gulf.

With their economies hard hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic, the UAE and Israel are hoping for rapid dividends from the normalizat­ion deal, including an influx of tourists as Dubai enters its winter high season.

“The start of scheduled flights will contribute to economic developmen­t and create further opportunit­ies for investment,” flydubai CEO Ghaith Al-Ghaith said when the service was announced earlier this month.

The Dubai carrier will fly the route twice daily, and Israeli airlines El Al and Israir are both expected to launch their commercial services between the cities next month.

Etihad Airways, based in the UAE capital Abu Dhabi, has said that it will begin flying to Tel Aviv in March 2021.

The UAE became only the third Arab country to normalize ties with Israel, following Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994.

The two countries have already signed treaties on visa-free travel — although that is yet to come into force — along with accords on investment protection, science and technology.

Since the historic agreement, Bahrain and Sudan have followed suit and agreed to forge ties.

The agreements shattered a longstandi­ng Arab consensus that there should be no normalizat­ion with Israel until it reaches a comprehens­ive peace deal with the Palestinia­ns.

Several Gulf Arab states have for years been quietly building relations with Israel on the basis of shared animosity toward Iran, with the US supporting the process. Regional heavyweigh­t Saudi Arabia has so far refrained from formalizin­g ties with Israel but has given the green light to overflight­s from the Jewish state.

After the UAE deal was announced by President Donald Trump in August, El Al flew a delegation of US and Israeli officials — led by Trump’s son-inlaw Jared Kushner — to Abu Dhabi in a historic direct service between the two countries.

That was followed by an official visit by a UAE delegation to Tel Aviv as well as a string of charter flights carrying business groups.

 ?? Reuters ?? A UAE flydubai flight arrives in Israel on Thursday.
Reuters A UAE flydubai flight arrives in Israel on Thursday.

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