Times of Suriname

Emirates to start Dubai-Athens-Newark flights

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USA - Emirates plans to start flying to the United States with a stop for passengers in Greece, its second so-called fifth freedom flight and a move that could anger US competitor­s who accuse it of competing unfairly through state subsidies.

The world’s largest longhaul airline said yesterday it would start daily flights to New Jersey’s Newark Liberty Internatio­nal Airport via Athens on March 12. Dubai-based Emirates already operates four daily flights to John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York, including one with a stop off in Milan. Fifth freedom rights allow an airline to fly between foreign countries as a part of services to and from its home country. Delta (DAL.N) and other US airlines have accused major Gulf carriers -- Emirates, Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways - of receiving tens of billions of dollars in unfair subsidies, and urged the former Obama Administra­tion to halt the Open Skies agreement. The Gulf carriers deny the allegation­s. The Obama Administra­tion ultimately declined to take action against the Gulf carriers who are owned by government­s of Middle East allies Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. US airline lobby group Open & Fair Skies has said it is optimistic the new administra­tion of President Donald Trump would “enforce our trade agreements and fight for American jobs”. “We look forward to briefing President-elect Donald Trump and his new administra­tion on the massive, unfair subsidies that the UAE and Qatar give to their state-owned Gulf carriers,” said Jill Zuckman, chief spokespers­on for the Partnershi­p for Open and Fair Skies, on Nov. 9. The lobby group is likely to put pressure on authoritie­s to stop the Dubai-AthensNewa­rk route before it starts, said Will Horton, senior analyst at CAPA - Centre for Aviation. However, the US carriers will have a hard time arguing that the Emirates flight is damaging given that U.S. carriers do not fly to Greece year-round, Horton said in emailed comments.

(Reuters.com)

 ??  ?? Koh Dong-jin, head of Samsung’s mobile business addresses during a press conference in Seoul, capital of South Korea. (Photo: Xinhua)
Koh Dong-jin, head of Samsung’s mobile business addresses during a press conference in Seoul, capital of South Korea. (Photo: Xinhua)

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