Arab Times

Mideast airlines lose $7bn as airports shut to combat virus

IATA calls for emergency aid of up to $200bn for airlines globally

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DUBAI, March 22, (AP): Seven Middle Eastern countries have suspended all commercial flights due to the fast-spreading new coronaviru­s, as the aviation industry’s largest trade associatio­n announced that airlines in the region have already lost more than $7 billion in revenue.

Those losses translate into potentiall­y hundreds of thousands of people losing their jobs in the airline industry in the Middle East alone, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n said.

IATA called for emergency aid of up to $200 billion for airlines globally.

The Middle East has some 20,000 cases of the virus, with most cases in Iran or linked to travel from Iran.

The virus killed another 149 people in the past 24 hours in Iran, pushing the death toll there to 1,284 amid over 18,000 confirmed cases. The government on Thursday joined other countries in ordering all shopping centers closed for two weeks. Only pharmacies, food stores and other necessary supply stores will be open, state media reported.

IATA says 16,000 passenger flights have been cancelled in the Middle East since the end of January.

“A lot of jobs are at risk, economies of the nations are being impacted and airline business in the Middle East is taking a bit hit,” Muhammad Albakri, IATA’s regional vice-president for Africa and the Middle East, said in a phone conference with reporters.

Already, major carriers like Emirates have urged pilots and cabin crew to take unpaid leave. Reports have emerged that Qatar Airways laid off several hundred employees. The airline did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover from the virus.

Job losses in the Middle East have especially far-reaching consequenc­es to the millions of foreign workers who send remittance­s home to families in India, Pakistan, the Philippine­s and eastern European countries. Gulf states like Qatar and the United Arab Emirates rely heavily on foreigners to work as airport support staff, pilots, cleaners and cabin crew.

“We are suffering, we are struggling. We are bleeding,” Albakri said in his most urgent appeal yet to government­s to step in and help many of these state-owned airlines by cutting taxes and offering direct financial assistance. IATA represents around 290 airlines worldwide.

Since February, Israeli national carrier El Al has laid off 1,000 employees and put another 5,500 on unpaid vacation, “almost all” of its staff, company spokesman Eitan Atias told the AP. It has reduced its flights from 47 destinatio­ns globally to just six: New York, Newark, Paris, London, Toronto and Johannesbu­rg.

Separately, Israel’s Mossad intelligen­ce agency was involved in obtaining thousands of coronaviru­s testing kits, Health Ministry Director Moshe Bar Siman Tov said. He thanked the Mossad and other security agencies for helping procure “important and intact kits.”

Israeli media had reported that the 100,000 kits apparently came from countries that don’t have diplomatic relations with Israel. The involvemen­t of the country’s spy agency in the quest to procure the kits signaled the extraordin­ary lengths Israel’s

government was willing to go to get enough tests.

On Thursday, Egypt and Lebanon became the latest two countries in the Middle East to shut down airports and suspend all passenger flights, joining Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan, Tunisia and Morocco.

Sudan’s transition­al government reopened airports for 48 hours only to allow Sudanese stranded abroad to return home and expats to leave the country. Libya’s rival government­s have also closed airports and border crossings, allowing only humanitari­an and cargo flights.

Other countries have largely limited or halted all flights and border crossings. Some, such as Israel, Iraq and Lebanon, have ordered citizens to stay home to contain the virus.

Seventeen doctors, including five former health ministers, urged Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in a letter to impose a widespread quarantine to prevent further infections and deaths, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

Albakri said internatio­nal bookings are down 40% for Mideast airlines and domestic bookings are also similarly impacted. The loss of $7.2 billion in revenue as of March 11 is in comparison to last year’s revenue at the same time, he said.

In Egypt, the most populous Arab country, some 138,000 jobs are immediatel­y at risk and $1 billion in airline revenue has been lost, according to IATA.

In Saudi Arabia, which suspended

the year-round Muslim pilgrimage to Makkah, $3 billion in revenue has been lost in the aviation industry, and more than 140,000 people could lose their jobs.

In a telling sign of how long disruption­s could last, Saudi Arabia on Thursday announced it was cancelling an entertainm­ent festival scheduled to take place in June and July in the city of Jeddah.

Albakri said another 163,000 people are at risk of losing their jobs in the United Arab Emirates, home to the region’s biggest carrier Emirates and the world’s busiest airport for internatio­nal travel in Dubai. The UAE’s airlines have absorbed $2.8 billion in base revenue loss, Albakri said.

The UAE has not shut its airports but has suspended the entry of all visitors and even its foreign residents who are currently abroad. Only Emirati citizens, who make up about 10% of the population, are allowed to return. The UAE also announced it was suspending all new labor permits until “further notice.”

Meanwhile, Iran also announced Thursday that 10,000 prisoners – among them an unknown number of inmates whose cases are political and related to activism or speech – would be granted amnesty under a decree by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on the occasion of the new year, called Nowruz.

The country has already released 85,000 prisoners on temporary leave to curb the spread of the virus inside prisons.

 ?? (AP) ?? In this file photo, passengers wear protective masks walk in their way to their plane in the departure terminal at the Rafik Hariri Internatio­nal Airport, in Beirut, Lebanon. With thousands of flights grounded around the world due to a fast-spreading virus and seven countries in the Middle East suspending all commercial flights, airlines in the region
have lost more than $7 billion in revenue, the aviation industry’s largest trade associatio­n said Thursday.
(AP) In this file photo, passengers wear protective masks walk in their way to their plane in the departure terminal at the Rafik Hariri Internatio­nal Airport, in Beirut, Lebanon. With thousands of flights grounded around the world due to a fast-spreading virus and seven countries in the Middle East suspending all commercial flights, airlines in the region have lost more than $7 billion in revenue, the aviation industry’s largest trade associatio­n said Thursday.

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