KLM to keep long-haul flights as testing demands for Covid-19 are softened

Business

Dutch airline KLM will keep operating long-haul flights, including vaccine distribution, after agreeing with the government on softer demands for returning air crews to carry out rapid Covid-19 tests.

The Dutch arm of the Air France-KLM said earlier in the week that it plans to cancel all its 270 weekly long-haul flights to the Netherlands as a result of new Covid-19 rules requiring passengers and crew to show evidence of a negative rapid coronavirus test taken just before departure.

The company at the time said this would make it impossible to keep flying to countries with a high risk of coronavirus infections as it would risk having to leave crew behind.

KLM warned that this would also hurt the distribution of vaccine as cargo flights would also be cancelled. But KLM on Saturday evening said it had reached a compromise in which flight crews would take a rapid antigen test before departure and after their return.

Crew would have to follow strict quarantine rules abroad, said the health ministry. Last week, the Netherlands decided to ban all passenger flights from Great Britain, South Africa and South America, for up to a month, to limit the spread of new mutations.

Passengers travelling to Amsterdam are still required to provide proof of a negative Covid-19 rapid test before departure, in addition to a negative PCR test taken within 72 hours of travel.

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