Low-cost carrier FlyDubai begins Israel flights after deal

Low-cost carrier FlyDubai begins Israel flights after deal
Israeli tourists waved their Israeli passports to journalists as they arrived in Dubai on Thursday.
2 min read
27 November, 2020
Low-cost carrier FlyDubai began regular flights to Tel Aviv on Thursday [Getty]

The low-cost carrier FlyDubai began regular flights to Tel Aviv on Thursday, the latest sign of the normalization deal taking hold between the United Arab Emirates and Israel.

FlyDubai flight No. FZ1163 landed at Ben-Gurion International Airport at 11:38 a.m. after a 3 hour, 20 minute flight. It received a water salute by the ground crew. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu then met FlyDubai's CEO Gaith al-Gaith, who was aboard the flight.

The return flight FZ1164, taking just over 2½ hours, arrived at Dubai International Airport at 6:37 p.m. Israeli tourists waved their Israeli passports to journalists watching them arrive at baggage claim.

Israeli carrier El Al is scheduled to begin flights in December to Dubai, the skyscraper-studded tourist hub of the UAE, a federation of seven sheikhdoms including Abu Dhabi.

The UAE and Israel formalised their efforts to normalise relations in September at a White House event organised by US President Donald Trump. The two countries had quiet relations prior, but in the time since, telephone calls now connect between the countries, tourists are starting to arrive and business delegations are seeking deals in both countries.

Largely left out of the accord are the Palestinians, who have a decades-long conflict with Israel in seeking their own independent state. The Palestinians largely have viewed the normalisation efforts of the UAE, as well as Bahrain and Sudan, as a stab in the back from their fellow Arabs.

The Emiratis at the time of the deal described it as “halting the annexation” of West Bank land claimed by the Palestinians in exchange for Emirati recognition. Netanyahu, however, has insisted that Israel has only suspended its plans to annex West Bank settlements.

A poll released by the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies in October showed that 88 percent of Arab citizens reject the thought of their country recognising Israel.

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