Airline giant Lufthansa said Thursday it was canceling all flights to Israel until March 28, after Jerusalem barred entry to almost all non-resident arrivals from five European nations, including Germany, over coronavirus fears.
“The Lufthansa group sees itself forced to make this cancellation for economic and operational reasons, as many passengers are no longer entitled to enter the country,” the group said in a statement.
Flights to Tel Aviv and Eilat by Lufthansa and its subsidiaries, Swiss and Austrian Airlines, will be canceled starting Sunday, March 8, until the end of the winter timetable on March 28.
Meanwhile, some flights will be halted on Friday and Saturday “as also flight crews are affected by these new restrictions.”
The Health Ministry on Wednesday barred entry to almost all non-residents arriving from France, Germany, Spain, Austria and Switzerland.
Earlier that day, it had already ordered citizens and residents arriving from the same countries to go into home quarantine.
The measures come on top of restrictions previously imposed on arrivals from mainland China, Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore, Macau, South Korea, Japan and Italy.
Lufthansa has already announced that it will ground 150 planes, including 25 long-haul aircraft, and slash its flight plan by 25 percent over the impact of the virus.
On Thursday, it said that would entail canceling 7,100 European flights in March, including 3,750 via Germany’s biggest air hub Frankfurt and 3,350 via Munich.
Many of the cancellations will fall on high-frequency domestic services to cities like Berlin and Hamburg.
Meanwhile, “a second focus of the route cancellations” was Italy, with the affected cities including Milan, Venice and Rome.
Passengers are advised to check the Lufthansa website before departing for the airport, as “in addition to domestic German and Italian connections, other flights to Scandinavia, Great Britain, the Baltic States, Poland, Russia, France, Spain, Portugal, etc. are affected,” Lufthansa said.
Among long-haul services, Lufthansa has canceled all routes to virus hotspots, mainland China and Iran, until late April and reduced capacity on routes to Hong Kong and Seoul.
The group has also instituted a hiring freeze.
“It is not yet possible to estimate the impact on earnings” from the virus measures, Lufthansa said.
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) warned Thursday the total revenue impact on the industry could be in the range of $63-$100 billion.