New Delhi, Apr 29 (PTI) Go First on Friday got the bilateral rights to operate Srinagar-Sharjah flights which the airline said it will restart in the next few days.
Go First had stopped operating the Srinagar-Sharjah flights on March 27 due to the lack of bilateral rights, which are granted under air services agreements signed between two countries to operate scheduled international passenger flights.
Union Home Minister Amit Shah had inaugurated Go First’s Srinagar-Sharjah flight on October 23 last year, connecting Jammu and Kashmir with the United Arab Emirates after around 11 years.
Since then, till March 26, Go First was operating these special flights under a coronavirus-induced air bubble arrangement between India and the UAE.
The measure was removed when India resumed scheduled international passenger flights on March 27.
On Friday, a Go First spokesperson told PTI that the airline has got the bilateral rights to operate five flights per week on the Srinagar-Sharjah-Srinagar route.
“We will restart flights on this route in the next few days. However, the frequency is yet to be decided,” the spokesperson said.
The bilateral agreement decides how many total flights (or seats) per week can be allowed to fly from one nation to another.
Even after such flying rights have been secured, an airline must have slots at both the airports in order to start scheduled flight operations.