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Egypt, UAE resume first Qatar flights since 2017

A mask-clad traveller prepares to board the first Qatar Airways flight bound for Cairo after the resumption of flights between Qatar and Egypt, at Qatar's Hamad International Airport near the capital Doha on January 18, 2021. Egypt reopened its airspace to Qatari flights on January 18 following a thaw in relations between Doha and a Saudi-led bloc. (AFP)
A mask-clad traveller prepares to board the first Qatar Airways flight bound for Cairo after the resumption of flights between Qatar and Egypt, at Qatar's Hamad International Airport near the capital Doha on January 18, 2021. Egypt reopened its airspace to Qatari flights on January 18 following a thaw in relations between Doha and a Saudi-led bloc. (AFP)
Mask-clad travellers wait at the gate before boarding the first flight to Sharjah after the resumption of air travel between Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, at Qatar's Hamad International Airport on January 18, 2021. (AFP)
Mask-clad travellers wait at the gate before boarding the first flight to Sharjah after the resumption of air travel between Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, at Qatar's Hamad International Airport on January 18, 2021. (AFP)
This picture taken on January 18, 2021 shows a luggage tag on a suitcase being transported on the first flight between Doha and Cairo after the reopening of Egyptian airspace to Qatari flights following a thaw in relations between Doha and a Saudi-led bloc, at Hamad International Airport near the Qatari capital Doha. (AFP)
This picture taken on January 18, 2021 shows a luggage tag on a suitcase being transported on the first flight between Doha and Cairo after the reopening of Egyptian airspace to Qatari flights following a thaw in relations between Doha and a Saudi-led bloc, at Hamad International Airport near the Qatari capital Doha. (AFP)
Travellers, mask-clad due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, wait at the Qatar Airways check-in desk ahead of a flight at Hamad International Airport near the Qatari capital Doha on January 18, 2021. (AFP)
Travellers, mask-clad due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, wait at the Qatar Airways check-in desk ahead of a flight at Hamad International Airport near the Qatari capital Doha on January 18, 2021. (AFP)
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18 Jan 2021 01:01:44 GMT9
18 Jan 2021 01:01:44 GMT9
  • An EgyptAir flight took off from Doha to Cairo, making it the first commercial flight in three and a half years between both countries
  • It was followed shortly after by the arrival of an Air Arabia flight from Sharjah in the UAE

DOHA: The first direct flights since 2017 between Qatar and its former rivals Egypt and the UAE took to the skies on Monday, following the end of a regional crisis.

Egypt and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) joined Saudi Arabia and Bahrain in cutting ties with Qatar in June 2017, accusing it of being too close to Iran and of backing Islamic extremists, charges Doha denies.

The quartet agreed to heal the rift at a Gulf summit on January 5 in Saudi Arabia, after a flurry of diplomatic activity by outgoing US President Donald Trump’s administration.

The first commercial flight from Qatar to Egypt in three and a half years, an EgyptAir service to Cairo, took off from windswept Doha airport.

It was followed shortly after by the arrival of an Air Arabia flight from Sharjah in the UAE.

The resumption of flights from Doha to Cairo will simplify travel for the large contingent of Egyptians living in Qatar.

As many as 300,000 Egyptians call Qatar home, according to official statistics, but many were unable to travel home during the crisis.

In May 2020, frustrated Egyptians protested outside the compound housing Egypt’s then-empty embassy.

Following the demonstration, 18 repatriation flights operated via neutral Oman to comply with Cairo’s ban on direct air traffic.

A Qatar Airways plane was due to also make the trip to Cairo later Monday.

Flights between Doha and Saudi Arabia, which has also opened its land border to Qatar, resumed on January 11.

The row complicated regional travel, divided families and raised costs faced by Qatari businesses.

Mustafa Ahmed, 38, an Egyptian technical engineer, said he was “very happy.”

“With direct flights, life will be easier, especially for families and children, avoiding the torment of changing airports and planes and waiting for hours for transit flights,” he told AFP.

Egyptians in Qatar work in a number of sectors including education, health care and engineering.

Thousands of Qatar’s majority-expatriate workforce, however, have lost their jobs as a result of a downturn caused by the coronavirus epidemic.

AFP

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