Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

KLM resumes flights to Israel

The Dutch flag carrier is renewing daily flights to Israel from Amsterdam, although there will be a one-hour stopover in Larnaca, Cyprus, while service from Tel Aviv to Amsterdam will be direct.

KLM
A KLM flight. Credit: Courtesy KLM

KLM Royal Dutch Airlines is resuming flights to Israel on Sunday, becoming the latest carrier to restore service to Tel Aviv following Israel’s 12-day war with Iran in June.

The move highlights both the resurgence of the Israeli aviation sector and the reemergence of Tel Aviv as an international travel hub.

The Dutch flag carrier is renewing daily flights to Israel from Amsterdam, although there will be a one-hour stopover in Larnaca, Cyprus, while service from Tel Aviv to Amsterdam will be direct.

International carriers planning to restore service to Israel next month include Air Canada, British Airways, Iberia and the German low-cost carrier Eurowings, with Italy’s ITA Airways scheduled to resume its flights to Tel Aviv in November.

The return to Israel of Europe’s biggest low-cost carrier, Irish Ryanair, tentatively scheduled for next month, is in doubt due to a dispute between the airline and the Israel Airports Authority over regaining its past flight slots.

Some 80,000 passengers were traveling through Ben-Gurion International Airport on Sunday on 470 international flights, according to the IAA.

See more from JNS Staff
The funding of the Palestinian Authority continues despite its violations of commitments to stop supporting terrorism.
Defense Minister Katz warned that any Iranian attack linked to developments in Lebanon will be met with a forceful response.
“I would never, never leak information like that to the public to hurt Jewish people, because they’re nice people and what I said sounds really bad,” Luc fils Jasmin told JNS of the video, which the state agency posted publicly.
Britain, France, Germany and Italy tie easing of penalties to verifiable curbs on Tehran’s nuclear program.
Amichai Chikli warned of Ankara’s ambitions after officials spoke of “liberating” Jerusalem, and cited Egypt-Turkey drills as concerning.
Israeli Medical Association terms the article a “cynical politicization of medicine and health.”