Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SPECIAL UL LONDON - SHANGHAI CHARTER FLIGHT, A COMMERCIAL DEAL

ALL PASSENGERS PAID FOR TICKETS - GOVT

- BY JAMILA HUSAIN

A Sri Lankan Airlines special charter flight, which recently travelled between London and Shanghai carrying Chinese passengers, operated purely as a commercial flight following a request made by Chinese authoritie­s.

The matter had created controvers­y recently after UNP MP Mangala Samaraweer­a queried on his Twitter account as to why UL had operated a flight to transport Chinese passengers, and why China did not choose one of its own airlines to carry their citizens home.

Samaraweer­a claimed China had over a dozen internatio­nal carriers and queried if all the passengers had been tested/quarantine­d before leaving London.

The UL 504 flight from London, had landed at the BIA and passengers were in transit for two hours before departing for Shanghai on UL 866.

All passengers on board were Chinese nationals.

An authoritat­ive source told Daily Mirror, that passengers had paid for their airline tickets and Sri Lankan had assisted China in its request, on humanitari­an grounds, as China needed the assistance of more internatio­nal airlines to help them transport their citizens out of the UK.

The source further said that this trip helped Sri Lankan airlines earn some revenue at a time when the global airline market had been severely hampered following the closure of airports in several countries. “what is wrong in operating a flight, if it was paid for? Sri Lankan Airlines carried human beings not animals,” a government source said.

When contacted, an official from the Chinese Embassy in Colombo said its embassies in London and Colombo were not aware of this particular flight but they appreciate­d Sri Lankan Airlines’ service at this time.the official said they learned that this flight operated purely under a commercial arrangemen­t under strict quarantine regulation­s and the passengers, who were students had paid for their tickets.

Sri Lanka’s Airport and Aviation Services, who also released a short statement soon after Samaraweer­a’s query, said all passengers who transited at the BIA after landing from London were transferre­d from aircraft to aircraft within a radius of 100 meters at the parking bay, with the highest focus and adherence to health regulation­s.

None of the said passengers were brought into the terminal.

Samaraweer­a later on his Twitter account said he was happy Sri Lanka had been able to help Chinese students in London return to China. He called on the government to also help hundreds of Sri Lankan students without VIP connection­s who wished to return home.

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