Gulf News

Flydubai adequately staffed for demand

Dubai airline is busy adding smaller European hubs

- BY JOHN BENNY Staff Reporter

Flydubai passengers will not see any flight cancellati­ons or delays happening because of a shortage of staff at the Dubai-based airline, its CEO said.

“We have not cancelled or delayed a launch of any flight now and (will not do so) in the near future because of shortages of staff,” said Ghaith Al Ghaith, during a pre-recorded interview with aviation analyst John Strickland. A large majority of its staff had opted for unpaid leave at the start of the pandemic, and this meant the airline did not have to make significan­t fresh hires when air travel demand rebounded in the second-half of 2021.

“We brought to the table an option to receive whatever settlement is contractua­lly applicable or remain a part of the airline and take an unpaid leave — we were very surprised when 97 per cent of the people actually took the unpaid leave,” said Al Ghaith.

flydubai, which took delivery of 11 Boeing 737 MAX jets last year, will add 23 more of those aeroplanes to its fleet in 2022, said Al Ghaith.

New destinatio­ns

flydubai has been launching more flights to smaller European hubs such as Santorini (Greece) and Pisa (Italy). “This not the first time we have taken a secondary airport — throughout Europe, there will be more such cities that can be served by us because they will be more attractive to businesses from Dubai,” said Al Ghaith. “We also have a strong middle-class resident population in UAE that would take trips more often.”

The flydubai chief said that Dubai’s Al Maktoum airport will be a part of the airline’s growth strategy. “It will be very important for us”

 ?? ?? Flydubai, which took delivery of 11 Boeing 737 MAX jets last year, will add 23 more of those aeroplanes to its fleet in 2022.
Flydubai, which took delivery of 11 Boeing 737 MAX jets last year, will add 23 more of those aeroplanes to its fleet in 2022.

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