Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Flydubai CEO: Demand for UAE-Israel flights soaring

“For Israelis, it is an excellent destination, and a part of this is Israel’s Arab population,” says flydubai CEO Ghaith Al Ghaith.

A flydubai A6-FDC. Aug. 3, 2012. Photo: Faisal Akram via Wikimedia Commons.
A flydubai A6-FDC. Aug. 3, 2012. Photo: Faisal Akram via Wikimedia Commons.

The head of United Arab Emirates budget airline, flydubai, said on Tuesday that the demand for travel from Israel is so great that the company will likely need to increase the number of its Tel Aviv-Dubai flights to 100 per week.

In an interview with the Israeli business daily Globes, Flydubai CEO Ghaith Al Ghaith, who was in Israel last week for the launch of flydubai’s Dubai-Tel Aviv route, said “a special situation has been created by the coronavirus. Our country is safe and green, and because there are not many destinations that you can fly to without going into isolation, there is an opportunity that we are seizing with both hands.”

“For Israelis, it is an excellent destination, and a part of this is Israel’s Arab population,” he added.

Al Gaith continued, “After the issue of visas is solved, we expect a massive number of tourists from the UAE who will want to visit Al-Aqsa [mosque] and historical sites.”

He also noted that “80 percent of the residents of the UAE are foreigners, and that will also be part of the tourism because until now they have not been able to fly to Tel Aviv from Dubai.”

Hundreds stuck at the airport after authorities in the kingdom halt approvals for some European-operated aircraft.
The troops crossed on foot through deep snow from the Syrian Hermon to the Mount Dov area in southern Lebanon to conduct reconnaissance and identify terrorist infrastructure, according to the Israeli military
The Israeli prime minister boasts an enormous nose while the U.S. president is grotesquely fat, appearing to divide between the two the stereotypical appearance of the Jew.
Joshua Berman’s new Haggadah tells the Passover story through the lens of ancient Egypt.
Some 3,500 sailors and Marines reach the Middle East, with additional forces on the way. The number could reach 10,000 troops.
The IDF carried out wide-scale airstrikes on regime and Hezbollah sites, expanding “Operation Roaring Lion.”