In June Lufthansa will double the number of flights to some holiday countries.



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Lufthansa, together with its controlled airlines Swiss and Eurowings, will program many traditional holiday destinations, including the Mediterranean destinations of Crete and Mallorca, as well as the island of Ziult on the north coast of Germany and the city of Rostock.

About 600 planes belonging to the group will remain on the ground.

On Thursday Lufthansa, the second largest airline in Europe after Ryanair, confirmed that it was in talks with the German government over a € 9 billion deal. aid package worth euros.

In exchange for the so-called stabilization package, the government proposed to take up to 25 percent. Lufthansa, Lufthansa said, to appoint a representative to the company’s board of directors.

The Serbian airline Air Serbia will resume flights from May 18

Serbian national airline Air Serbia will resume flights canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic on May 18, the country’s news portal B92 announced.

Initially there will be a limited number of flights to London Heathrow Airport, to the German cities of Zurich and Frankfurt, and to the Austrian capital Vienna.

“Many countries currently have travel restrictions, but once these restrictions are relaxed, we intend to give our passengers the opportunity to fly,” said Duncan Naysmith, CEO of Air Serbia.

“Our team closely monitors all decisions and regularly informs our passengers about the status of their reservations,” he added.

Regular summer time will be adjusted to take into account the restrictions imposed due to the pandemic. Some of the more popular routes will have scheduled flights, some routes will be restricted, and some routes will not have temporary flights, Naysmith said.

Air Serbia will fly to Podgorica, Zurich, Vienna, Paris, Tirana, Zagreb, Skopje, Bucharest, London, Sarajevo, Sofia, Frankfurt, Brussels, Kiev, Krasnodar, Zadar and Nice.
Flights to Tivat, Ljubljana, Athens, Thessaloniki, Amsterdam, Prague, Moscow, Berlin, Rome, Istanbul, Milan, Düsseldorf, Dubrovnik, Split, Larnaca, Copenhagen, New York, Stuttgart, Banja Luka, Tel Aviv will be operated in accordance with limited hours. , Venice, Pula, Barcelona, ​​Saint Petersburg and Madrid.

The company will not temporarily operate flights to Helsinki, Lviv, Amman, Florence, Chisinau, Rostov-on-Don, Malta, Geneva, Cairo, Beirut and Rijeka, Naysmith said.

Air Serbia controlled 51 percent. the stake is owned by the Serbian government, with the remaining 49 percent. It is owned by Etihad Airways of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

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