Lufthansa Extends China, Tehran Flight Suspensions Due to Coronavirus

Lufthansa Extends China, Tehran Flight Suspensions Due to Coronavirus
Lufthansa airplanes are seen parked on the tarmac at Frankfurt airport, Germany, on Nov. 7, 2019. (Ralph Orlowski/Reuters/File Photo)
Reuters
3/2/2020
Updated:
3/2/2020

German airline group Lufthansa said on March 2 that it was extending the suspension of flights to China until April 24, to Tehran until April 30, and reducing services to northern Italy due to the coronavirus outbreak.

The epidemic, which began in China, is disrupting flight demand and many airlines have suspended or adjusted services in response.

“After a thorough assessment of all currently available information on the coronavirus, Lufthansa Group has decided to continue to extend the suspension of flights between Germany, Switzerland, Austria, and mainland China by Lufthansa, SWISS, and Austrian Airlines until April 24,” Lufthansa said.

A man and a girl wearing face masks wait to cross a street in Beijing on Feb. 28, 2020. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)
A man and a girl wearing face masks wait to cross a street in Beijing on Feb. 28, 2020. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)

It said it was also suspending flights between Munich and Hong Kong between March 6 and April 24, with passengers to be put onto flights via Frankfurt and Zurich where possible. It said it was canceling some flights between Frankfurt and Munich to Seoul too.

Lufthansa Group airlines, which include Swiss and Austrian airlines, had already said on Friday that it would reduce the number of short- and medium-haul flights by up to 25 percent in the coming weeks depending on how coronavirus spreads.

On Monday Lufthansa gave details of its scheduling changes, including adjusting services to northern Italy, which has become a flashpoint in the coronavirus outbreak.

It said Austrian Airlines was slashing its flights to Italy in March and April by 40 percent while Lufthansa subsidiary Brussels Airlines is cutting flights to Rome, Milan, Venice, and Bologna by 30 percent until March 14.

A woman wearing a protective mask crosses Piazza Duomo with her bicycle in Milan on March 2, 2020. (Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images)
A woman wearing a protective mask crosses Piazza Duomo with her bicycle in Milan on March 2, 2020. (Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images)

Swiss Airlines will probably also cut some services to parts of Italy until the end of April, while Eurowings is reducing capacity to some Italian destinations until March 8.

Lufthansa said it was too early to assess the impact on its earnings, which are due to be published on March 19.

The airline has already said it would look into economic temporary measures such as a company-wide hiring freeze.

By Michelle Martin