UAE’s Etihad Airways to start daily flights to Tel Aviv in March

The move will deepen ties between the United Arab Emirates and Israel after two countries agreed to normalise relations.

Direct flights on Etihad between the emirates’ capital of Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv will begin March 28 with tickets already available on Etihad's website [File: Kamran Jebreili/Reuters]

Etihad Airways, the national airline of the United Arab Emirates, announced Monday it would start operating daily nonstop flights to Tel Aviv early next year, a move that deepens ties between the UAE and Israel after the two countries agreed to normalise relations.

Direct flights on Etihad between the emirates’ capital of Abu Dhabi and Tel Aviv will begin March 28, giving “Emiratis and UAE residents the opportunity to discover Israel’s historical sites, beaches, restaurants and nightlife,” the state-owned carrier said in a statement. Tickets are already available on Etihad’s website.

The announcement came after Dubai’s budget carrier, flydubai, said it would begin offering direct flights between Dubai and Tel Aviv later this month.

The UAE and Israel signed a United States-brokered accord establishing formal diplomatic ties on the White House lawn in September.

The deal marked a diplomatic achievement for US President Donald Trump before his re-election campaign and reflects a changing Middle East in which shared enmity of Iran has largely overtaken traditional Arab support for the Palestinians.

Soon after the UAE, Bahrain and Sudan agreed to formalise ties with Israel in similar agreements.

Bahrain’s foreign minister will lead the country’s first official trip to Israel on Wednesday, state-run Bahrain News Agency reported.

The high-level diplomatic visit will seek “to affirm Bahrain’s firm and permanent stance toward supporting the Mideast peace process” and “to shed light on shared economic opportunities,” the agency said.

The US State Department said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, on a Middle East tour, would be in Israel during the coming days, as well.

The normalisation deal, rejected by Palestinians as a betrayal of their cause, has been welcomed among Israelis eager to visit the UAE’s skyscraper-studded cities and make public their long-secret commercial ties with the federation of seven sheikhdoms.

In recent weeks, a series of Israeli delegations, including entrepreneurs, tourists and even Israeli settlers from the occupied West Bank, has flown to Dubai for meetings with Emirati businesspeople and officials.

The air route became commercially viable after Saudi Arabia decided to allow Israeli jets to traverse its skies, cutting the flight time between the countries to some three hours.

Mohammad al-Bulooki, chief operating officer of Etihad Aviation Group, praised the start of scheduled flights as a “historic moment” that opens up opportunities for “trade and tourism not just between the two countries but also within the region and beyond.”

Etihad said the start of regular service with Israel would turn Abu Dhabi into a crucial travel hub for Israelis traveling to China, India and Australia.

Source: AP

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