Flights between Cairo and Moscow will resume in mid-September, after months of suspension due to the emergence of the coronavirus.
The civil aviation authority has approved Russian request to resume flights between Cairo and Moscow starting mid-September, announced EgyptAir.
The carrier plans to operate 27 flights to transport about 2,500 passengers to 19 international destinations.
EgyptAir announced it will also resume international flights to Paris, London, Milan, Istanbul, Nairobi, Khartoum, Sharjah, Beirut, Manama, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and exceptional flights to Jeddah, Abha, Dammam, and Kigali. In addition, it will begin operating domestic flights to Sharm El-Sheikh, Hurghada, Aswan, and Luxor.
Russia joined the countries that had resumed their flights to Cairo, and EgyptAir revealed that coordination with Aeroflot is underway with the civil aviation authorities of the two countries to finalize the necessary arrangements to start the actual operation of the flights in mid-September.
Egypt is the fifth country with which Russia has resumed flying.
On Saturday, Egypt’s health ministry said that 130 more patients have been diagnosed with coronavirus, bringing the total infections in the country to 99,712.
According to the report, there are 16 deaths on Saturday, while 157 infections and 16 deaths were recorded on Friday.
The Health Ministry spokesman, Khaled Megahed, said that the number of coronavirus deaths increased to 5,551 with 903 more patients having recovered and discharged from hospitals, bringing the total number of recoveries in the country to 77,208.
The country reported its first coronavirus case on February 14th and began imposing precautionary and lockdown measures mid-March.