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| The new route was announced by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi last July (AFP Photo/INDRANIL MUKHERJEE) |
New Delhi (AFP) - India's state-run carrier Air India said Friday it will fly over Saudi airspace to Tel Aviv, a move that ends a decades-long Saudi ban on the use of its airspace for flights to Israel.
The
decision comes at a time of growing ties between India and several Middle
Eastern countries, and after Israel's leader Benjamin Netanyahu hinted at a
diplomatic realignment in the region earlier this month.
"The
Air India flights to Israel will start from March 22. The flights will take
around seven hours and five minutes, and fly over... Saudi airspace,"
airline spokesman Praveen Bhatnagar told AFP.
The new
route was announced by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi last July, with
Netanyahu first suggesting in January the route could pass over Saudi Arabia.
Riyadh has
no official ties with Tel Aviv, with Israel's national carrier El Al currently
taking a detour over the Red Sea on its India service to avoid Saudi and
Iranian airspace.
Netanyahu
told reporters in Washington earlier this month that Air India had reached an
agreement with Saudi Arabia for the route.
The
airline's spokesman at the time confirmed the launch schedule for a
thrice-a-week service from New Delhi to Tel Aviv but couldn't confirm the exact
route.
'Common
challenges'
Flying over
Saudi Arabia significantly shortens the flight time over the proposed route.
Riyadh has
maintained public silence about suggestions the kingdom has covert relations
with Israel, but Netanyahu said earlier this month in Washington that Israel
and the Arab states have "never been closer".
"Most
of the states in our region know -- they know very well, believe me -- that
Israel is not their enemy, but their indispensible ally in confronting our
common challenges and seizing our common opportunities," Netanyahu also
said at a public event in the US capital.
Modi became
the first Indian Prime Minister to visit Israel last year, and has pushed for
investment, technology cooperation and closer defence ties between the two
countries.
Saudi
Arabia and its immediate neighbourhood is also strategically important for
India as the major source of the country's energy imports.
The wider
region also hosts millions of Indian migrant workers who send billions of
dollars in remittances each year.

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