India will resume scheduled international flights from December 15, the Civil Aviation Ministry said Friday evening according to a report by news agency PTI.
“The matter of resumption of scheduled commercial international passenger services, to and from India, has been examined in consultation with the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Ministry of External Affairs and the Ministry of Health, and it has been decided… may be resumed from December 15,” PTI quoted an order from the Aviation Ministry.
Scheduled international flights – except repatriation services and flights carrying essential goods – were suspended in March last year, as the country went into a Covid lockdown.
Restrictions were eased gradually – as the caseload dropped and vaccination coverage increased, with ‘air bubble’ arrangements with other countries. India currently has 28 such deals.
Under such a deal, international passenger flights can be operated by member countries’ respective carriers into each other’s territories, subject to certain conditions.
The decision to re-open scheduled international passenger traffic comes amid rising concern over a new variant of the coronavirus – the B.1.1.529 strain first detected in South Africa.
The variant has since spread to neighbouring Botswana, Israel and Hong Kong.
The new variant has been red-flagged for an alarmingly high number of mutations (50), including more than 30 on the spike protein, which is what the virus uses to unlock access to our body’s cells.
Researchers are still trying to confirm whether this makes it more transmissible or lethal than earlier variants.
Germany and Italy have joined Britain in banning most travel from South Africa as governments across the world scramble to prevent the spread of the new variant. In a sign of the growing alarm, the European Union separately proposed prohibiting travel from southern Africa.