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No longer ATC
22nd Mar 2020, 13:45
As from wednesday,all pax flights suspended..

Daddy Fantastic
22nd Mar 2020, 13:52
About time as well..

krismiler
22nd Mar 2020, 14:06
This is what's listed on the website

.Flights have been suspended to the following destinations:

Abidjan (via Accra): From 21 March – 20 May
Abuja: From 23 March – until further notice
Accra: From 21 March – 20 May
Adelaide: From 23 March – 20 May
Ahmedabad: From 23 March – 28 March
Algiers: From 18 March – 20 May
Amman: From 17 March – 30 April
Athens: From 23 March- 30 June
Auckland (via Bali): From 29 March – 30 June
Auckland: From 29 March – 30 June
Baghdad: From 17 March – 30 April
Bahrain: From 29 March – 30 June
Bali: From 29 March – 30 June
Bangkok: From 23 March – until further notice
Bangkok–Hong Kong: From 9 March – 20 May
Barcelona: From 20 March - 20 May
Basra: From 17 March – 30 April
Beijing: From 23 March – until further notice
Beirut: From 17 March – 30 April
Bengaluru: From 23 March – 28 March
Bologna: From 13 March – 20 May
Brisbane: From 29 March – 30 June
Brussels: From 26 March – 30 June
Budapest: From 13 March – 20 May
Buenos Aires (via Rio de Janeiro): From 25 March – 20 May
Cairo: From 19 March – 30 June
Casablanca: From 16 March – 30 June
Cebu/Clark: From 29 March- 30 June
Chennai: From 22 March – 28 March
Chicago: From 27 March – 30 June
Christchurch (via Sydney): From 29 March – 30 June
Cochin: From 23 March – 30 June
Colombo (via Male): From 23 March – 30 June
Conakry: From 22 March – 19 May
Dakar (via Conakry): From 22 March – 19 May
Dammam: From 09 March – 30 April
Delhi: From 22 March – 28 March
Dhaka: From 22 March- 31 March
Dubai–Bangkok: From 23 March until further notice, passengers can only travel from Bangkok to Dubai as directed by Thai authorities.
Dubai–Colombo: From 19 March – 25 March. During this time, passengers can only travel from Colombo to Dubai as directed by Sri Lankan authorities.
Dubai–Hanoi: From 18 March – 22 March. During this time, passengers can only travel from Hanoi to Dubai as directed by Vietnamese authorities.
Dubai–Ho Chi Minh: From 18 March – 24 March. During this time, passengers can only travel from Ho Chi Minh to Dubai as directed by Vietnamese authorities.
Dubai–Mauritius: From 20 March – 2 April. During this time, passengers can only travel from Mauritius to Dubai as directed by Mauritian authorities.
Dubai–Phuket: From 23 March until further notice, passengers can only travel from Phuket to Dubai as directed by Thai authorities.
Durban: From 24 March – 20 May
Dusseldorf: From 23 March – until further notice
Edinburgh: From 25 March – 30 June
Entebbe: From 23 March – 23 April
Fort Lauderdale: From 13 March – 30 June
Frankfurt: From 23 March – until further notice
Geneva: From 23 March – 30 June
Guangzhou: From 05 February – 30 April
Hamburg: From 23 March – until further notice
Hanoi: From 23 March – 30 June
Harare (via Lusaka): From 20 March – 20 May
Ho Chi Minh: From 25 March – 30 June
Houston: From 27 March – 30 June
Hyderabad: From 22 March – 28 March
Islamabad: From 22 March – until further notice
Istanbul (IST): From 17 March – 20 May
Istanbul (SAW): From 17 March – 20 May
Jeddah: From 16 March – 30 April
Kabul: From 26 March – 30 June
Karachi: From 22 March – until further notice
Khartoum: From 18 March – 20 May
Kolkata: From 23 March – 28 March
Kuwait City: From 14 March – 30 April
Lagos: From 23 March – until further notice
Larnaca: From 17 March – 20 May
Lahore: From 22 March – until further notice
Lisbon: From 19 March – 30 April
London Stansted: From 25 March – 30 June
Luanda: From 22 March – 20 May
Lusaka: From 20 March – 20 May
Lyon: From 23 March – until further notice
Madrid: From 18 March – 20 May
Malta (via Larnaca): From 17 March – 20 May
Mauritius: 25 March – 30 June
Medina: From 05 March – 30 April
Melbourne (via Singapore): From 23 March – 20 May
Melbourne: From 29 March – 30 June
Mexico City (via Barcelona): From 20 March – 20 May
Milan: From 15 March – 20 May
Moscow: From 30 March – 30 June
Mumbai: From 22 March – 28 March
Munich: From 23 March – until further notice
Muscat: From 22 March – 05 April
New York EWR (via Athens): From 13 March – 20 May
New York EWR: From 24 March – until further notice
New York JFK (via Milan): From 11 March – 20 May
New York JFK: From 24 March – until further notice
Newcastle: From 25 March – 30 June
Nice: From 23 March – until further notice
Orlando: From 24 March – 30 June
Osaka: From 26 March – 30 June
Oslo: From 28 March – 30 June
Paris: From 23 March – until further notice
Peshawar: From 22 March – until further notice
Phnom Penh (via Bangkok): From 29 March – 30 June
Phuket: From 23 March – until further notice
Porto: From 17 March – 20 May
Prague: From 25 March – 30 June
Rio de Janeiro: From 25 March – 20 May
Riyadh: From 16 March – 30 April
Rome: From 15 March – 20 May
Saint Petersburg: From 30 March – 30 June
San Francisco: 29 March – 30 June
Santiago (via Rio de Janeiro): From 25 March – 20 May
Seattle: From 26 March – 30 June
Shanghai: From 05 February – 30 April
Sialkot: From 22 March – until further notice
Stockholm: From 26 March – 30 June
Taipei: From 16 March – 20 May
Tehran: From 26 February – 30 April
Trivandrum: From 22 March – 28 March
Tunis: From 18 March – 20 May
Venice: From 12 March – 20 May
Vienna: From 23 March – 30 June
Warsaw: From 15 March – 20 May



Check flight status (https://www.emirates.com/sg/english/manage-booking/flight-status/)

krismiler
22nd Mar 2020, 14:25
Latest announcement.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/emirates-flights-suspended-covid-19-coronavirus-12565320

DUBAI: Emirates announced on Sunday (Mar 22) that it will “temporarily suspend" all its passenger operations from Wednesday in light of the COVID-19 outbreak that has forced countries to close their borders.

“Until January 2020, the Emirates Group was doing well against our current financial year targets. But COVID-19 has brought all that to a sudden and painful halt over the past six weeks,” the chairman and CEO of the Emirates Group Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum said.

"As a global network airline, we find ourselves in a situation where we cannot viably operate passenger services until countries re-open their borders, and travel confidence returns.

“We continue to watch the situation closely, and as soon as things allow, we will reinstate our services.”

Cargo flights will still operate as normal, he said.

“These are unprecedented times for the airline and travel industry, but we will get through it. Our business is taking a hit, but what matters in the long run is that we do the right thing for our customers, our employees, and the communities we serve," the CEO added.

orionsbelt
22nd Mar 2020, 14:48
Emirates web sites in both London and Bangkok do not show this at 1440 Gmt 22/3, likewise friends with tickets from BKK- LDN STN have had no notification of this. Internet searches from London do not at this time validate this. I can see the CNA from the link?
Please provide a EMIRATES web site link that confirms this report.
Thanks ***

OK Now found notification. @1520gmt

Comoman
22nd Mar 2020, 14:52
https://www.emirates.com/media-centre/the-emirates-groups-business-response-to-covid-19/

"Emirates retains cargo operations, but temporarily suspends passenger operations by 25 March"

pax britanica
22nd Mar 2020, 14:53
Should EK even be allowed to fly to London -with their huge transit business they are surely very prone to carrying infection globally

Rutan16
22nd Mar 2020, 14:59
Should EK even be allowed to fly to London -with their huge transit business they are surely very prone to carrying infection globally

That horse has bolted !

The UK could well be a NET exporter of COVID-19 , however the world NEEDS to continue to move pallets including Metric Sh*T tonnes (pardon the Anglo Saxon) of vital medical supplies , IT equipment and support equipment .

Rutan16
22nd Mar 2020, 15:05
Should EK even be allowed to fly to London -with their huge transit business they are surely very prone to carrying infection globally

That horse has bolted !

The UK could well be a NET exporter of COVID-19 , however the world NEEDS to continue to move pallets including Metric Sh*T tonnes (pardon the Anglo Saxon) of vital medical supplies , IT equipment and support equipment .

atakacs
22nd Mar 2020, 15:27
No surprise here. Just perplexed by the various "end date" mentioned (when any). Can't really see the pattern.

cashash
22nd Mar 2020, 15:36
At least EK are just slashing pay rather than laying people off. A 50% wage cut is better than no job at all.

JFW
22nd Mar 2020, 15:49
The webpage noted in post 6 directs to an invalid web page

cashash
22nd Mar 2020, 15:56
https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune.org-vbulletin/576x1024/img_20200322_wa0001_959a52c771fc5dcd679b0ed4bf88426d5de84535 .jpg

Airbubba
22nd Mar 2020, 16:05
The webpage noted in post 6 directs to an invalid web page

Here's an updated link:

https://www.emirates.com/media-centre/the-emirates-groups-business-response-to-covid-19-updated/

Text of the media release in case the link breaks again:

UPDATED AS OF 7:30 PM DUBAI TIME

Emirates retains cargo operations, but temporarily suspends most passenger operations by 25 March
dnata significantly reduces operations, including temporary closure of operations at some international locations where demand is low
Group implements basic salary reduction for majority of employees for three months, will not cut jobs
Supports government measures to safeguard community health

Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 22 March 2020 – Since the COVID-19 outbreak began, Emirates and dnata have been adapting operations in line with regulatory directives as well as travel demand.

The airline has aimed to maintain passenger flights for as long as feasible to help travellers return home amidst an increasing number of travel bans, restrictions, and country lockdowns across the world. It continues to maintain vital international air cargo links for economies and communities, deploying its fleet of 777 freighters for the transport of essential goods including medical supplies across the world.

With many of its airline customers dramatically reducing flights or ceasing services altogether, dnata has also significantly reduced its operations, including temporarily shutting some offices across its international network.

HH Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Chairman and Chief Executive of Emirates Group said: “The world has literally gone into quarantine due to the COVID-19 outbreak. This is an unprecedented crisis situation in terms of breadth and scale: geographically, as well as from a health, social, and economic standpoint. Until January 2020, the Emirates Group was doing well against our current financial year targets. But COVID-19 has brought all that to a sudden and painful halt over the past 6 weeks.

“As a global network airline, we find ourselves in a situation where we cannot viably operate passenger services until countries re-open their borders, and travel confidence returns. By Wednesday 25 March, although we will still operate cargo flights which remain busy, Emirates will have temporarily suspended most of its passenger operations. We continue to watch the situation closely, and as soon as things allow, we will reinstate our services."

Having received requests from governments and customers to support the repatriation of travellers, Emirates will continue to operate passenger and cargo flights to the following countries until further notice, as long as borders remain open, and there is demand: the UK, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Australia, South Africa, USA, and Canada. The situation remains dynamic, and travellers can check flight status on emirates.com.

Sheikh Ahmed added: “Emirates Group has a strong balance sheet, and substantial cash liquidity, and we can, and will, with appropriate and timely action, survive through a prolonged period of reduced flight schedules, so that we are adequately prepared for the return to normality.”

Cost reduction measures

The Emirates Group has undertaken a series of measures to contain costs, as the outlook for travel demand remains weak across markets in the short to medium term. This includes:

Postponing or cancelling discretionary expenditure
A freeze on all non-essential recruitment and consultancy work
Working with suppliers to find cost savings and efficiency
Encouraging employees to take paid or unpaid leave in light of reduced flying capacity
A temporary reduction of basic salary for the majority of Emirates Group employees for three months, ranging from 25% to 50%. Employees will continue to be paid their other allowances during this time. Junior level employees will be exempt from basic salary reduction
Presidents of Emirates and dnata – Sir Tim Clark and Gary Chapman – will take a 100% basic salary cut for three months

On the decision to reduce basic salary, Sheikh Ahmed said: “Rather than ask employees to leave the business, we chose to implement a temporary basic salary cut as we want to protect our workforce and keep our talented and skilled people, as much as possible. We want to avoid cutting jobs. When demand picks up again, we also want to be able to quickly ramp up and resume services for our customers.”

The Emirates Group has strong liquidity, with a healthy cash position but it is prudent that it take steps to reduce costs at this time. Emirates remains committed to serving its markets and looks forward to resuming a normal flight schedule as soon as that is permitted by the relevant authorities.

Safeguarding customers, employees, and communities

Emirates Group closely monitors the situation and keeps in regular contact with all relevant authorities, so that it can implement the latest guidance to keep travellers and its employees safe and healthy.

The company has strongly discouraged its employees from non-essential travel, implemented work from home policies for all employees where operationally feasible, enhanced cleaning and disinfection protocols at its facilities, introduced temperature screening at its key office entry points, and launched internal educational campaigns on hand hygiene and health practices to reduce risk of COVID-19.

Over the past weeks, the airline has also implemented enhanced cleaning and disinfecting measures on all of its aircraft departing Dubai as a precaution, and worked closely with airports to implement screening measures as required by the local authorities.

Frontline employees such as crew and airport teams have also been provided with support to stay safe while on duty, including providing hand sanitizers and masks where required.

The Emirates Group fully supports all initiatives to safeguard the health of communities in every market where it operates, including the UAE’s national COVID-19 response.

Sheikh Ahmed said: “These are unprecedented times for the airline and travel industry, but we will get through it. Our business is taking a hit, but what matters in the long run is that we do the right thing for our customers, our employees, and the communities we serve. With the support and unity that we have seen from our employees, partners, customers, and other stakeholders, I’m confident that Emirates can tackle this challenge and come out stronger.”

Valerie Tan

Emirates Public Relations

[email protected]

qwertyuiop
22nd Mar 2020, 16:19
Hopefully EK will look after their crew! I’m not holding my breath.

cashash
22nd Mar 2020, 16:22
Hopefully EK will look after their crew! I’m not holding my breath.

3 months on 50% basic pay - after that to be determined.

kontrolor
22nd Mar 2020, 16:25
its travelling demand that killed their desire to operate any further, not the medical reasons (stop spreading the virus). Capitalism at its best

BEA 71
22nd Mar 2020, 18:22
its travelling demand that killed their desire to operate any further, not the medical reasons (stop spreading the virus). Capitalism at its best
Words of hate.....

archae86
22nd Mar 2020, 18:28
According to a story posted at CNBC, Emirates has revised this:

CNBC story on Emirates revision (https://www.cnbc.com/2020/03/22/emirates-airline-to-suspend-all-passenger-operations-by-march-25.html)

“Having receiving requests from governments and customers to support the repatriation of travellers, Emirates will continue to operate passenger and cargo flights to the following countries until further notice, as long as borders remain open, and there is demand: the UK, Switzerland, Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Japan, Singapore, Australia, South Africa, USA, and Canada,” a company statement said Sunday.

“The situation remains dynamic, and travellers can check flight status on emirates.com.”

The company added South Korea to that list shortly after issuing the statement.

Longtimer
22nd Mar 2020, 18:42
An interesting change.
The state-owned carrier said it will keep flying to the U.S. (https://globalnews.ca/tag/united-states), the U.K., Japan, Australia (https://globalnews.ca/tag/australia) and Canada, among a few other select destinations. The company had just hours earlier announced a suspension of all passenger flights, but said it reversed that decision after receiving requests from governments and customers to support the repatriation of travellers. Story link: https://globalnews.ca/news/6715444/emirates-flights-cut-coronavirus/

Mr Good Cat
22nd Mar 2020, 20:01
Words of hate.....

He's sort of right though.

So far Emirates Holidays UK arm is the only major holiday company here not refunding customers outside of the UK FCO non-essential travel restriction dates, even though on arrival in the UAE / holiday destination you'd be ordered to isolate in your hotel room or not get a visa at all. Couldn't make it up.

However, they're being lovely enough to waive the amendment fee if you rebook to a more expensive date later on. I wonder if such customer service may bite them on the ass in the future (should we have one). Hopefully the UK FCO advice will wrap around the UAE isolation restrictions so customers at least can claim on insurance.

I guess when you're desperate for cash you'll grab it wherever you can and worry about the fallout later.

FE Hoppy
22nd Mar 2020, 21:17
The remaining flights are just repatriation flights. LH group the same until they completely stop very soon.

Doors To Manuel
22nd Mar 2020, 22:11
No surprise here. Just perplexed by the various "end date" mentioned (when any). Can't really see the pattern.

I think the pattern is fairly obvious. Where have they over-expanded too much, too soon and are losing money due to lack of demand prior to the crisis.
Simples!

uffington sb
22nd Mar 2020, 22:33
Mrs Uffington is in Auckland at the moment and due back with Emirates on 2 May.
Emirates have not been in contact with her, and it was only by chance I had a look at PPRuNe and was able to notify her.
She’s tried to phone their Auckland office but no luck.

atakacs
22nd Mar 2020, 22:49
To be honest Mrs Uffington should read the news and leave her cave...

Anti Skid On
23rd Mar 2020, 03:36
To be honest Mrs Uffington should read the news and leave her cave...
Mrs Uffington may be in lockdown in 48 hours; I note from the above list EK are still flying from SYD, and as QF are (or were) partners on their flight via DXB, she might be able to get to SYD on one of the few QF flights and onwards from there. Not sure if ringing QF will be of any help or just as bad. Has she contacted the UK High Commission in Wellington?

cashash
23rd Mar 2020, 15:06
Mrs Uffington is in Auckland at the moment and due back with Emirates on 2 May.
Emirates have not been in contact with her, and it was only by chance I had a look at PPRuNe and was able to notify her.
She’s tried to phone their Auckland office but no luck.


Mrs Uffington is not going to get back to the UK through DXB on any carrier any time soon. Total lockdown for 2 weeks announced by GCAA.

UAE suspends all passenger and transit flights (https://gulfnews.com/business/aviation/coronavirus-uae-suspends-all-passenger-and-transit-flights-1.1584917287850)

kwaiyai
25th Mar 2020, 09:40
Learn more (https://click.e.emirates.email/?qs=d778fc5bfbe84bc1aa8d1e519e6aa34f3567de0d361b10069986e4e5 03cbfb156b58dc9495c3a00dbbdd3f75a532ecc8f3b1718cfd012c45b5fa 286b29a5878f) COVID-19 UPDATE
Hello XXXXX, the world has literally gone into quarantine due to the COVID-19 outbreak. This is an unprecedented crisis situation in terms of breadth and scale, from a global health, social and economic standpoint.

On 23 March, the UAE government directed the suspension of all passenger flights into the country within 48 hours. This is a measure to protect communities from the further spread of COVID-19. In line with this directive, Emirates is temporarily suspending all our passenger flights from 25 March 2020.

We are very sorry for any inconvenience this may cause, and rest assured that we will resume our services as soon as the situation allows. This is an unprecedented period in the airline and travel industry. But with your support, we are confident that we will be back and welcoming you on board again soon. For now please stay safe.

Sincerely,

Adnan Kazim
Chief Commercial Officer
Emirates Airline

Airbubba
25th Mar 2020, 14:32
The only EK flights I see up right now are BOS and GRU coming home and the freighters. Nothing over North or South America.

https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/pprune.org-vbulletin/1265x555/uae_a65ebbc8481e68bd5b588757f7e46539b72a9bf7.jpg

Well, looking closer there is also a Triple operating DXB-RUH and an A380 going DXB-DWC (25 nm).

Emma Royds
26th Mar 2020, 06:31
The RUH flight is a pax aircraft operating with just freight. A sign of things to come!

Meanwhile, Qatar have increased capacity. Oh the irony! :E

Business Traveller - Qatar Airways announces capacity increases (https://www.businesstraveller.com/business-travel/2020/03/25/qatar-airways-announces-capacity-increases/)

RoyHudd
27th Mar 2020, 20:14
Employee safety....nah...... Passenger safety.....nope, lets prioritise Profit....yep that's the QR Doha Dogs to a T. Thanks Al-Bakr, your greed will cause suffering.

EK and EY are no better btw.

crewmeal
28th Mar 2020, 06:54
At least part of your airport isn't being used as a morgue - yet!

BHX morgue (https://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-temporary-mortuary-being-built-at-birmingham-airport-11964675)