• Officials in full protective gear disinfecting Indonesian students as they disembark upon the arrival at Hang Nadim international airport in Batam, following their evacuation from the Chinese city of Wuhan due to the deadly SARS-like virus. AFP
    Officials in full protective gear disinfecting Indonesian students as they disembark upon the arrival at Hang Nadim international airport in Batam, following their evacuation from the Chinese city of Wuhan due to the deadly SARS-like virus. AFP
  • People wear protective masks as they visit Global Village in Dubai. EPA
    People wear protective masks as they visit Global Village in Dubai. EPA
  • A quarantine worker disinfects a bus entering the National Human Resources Development Centre in Jincheon, South Korea. EPA
    A quarantine worker disinfects a bus entering the National Human Resources Development Centre in Jincheon, South Korea. EPA
  • A Buddhist monk wears a mask to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus as he collects alms in Chinatown at Bangkok, Thailand. Reuters
    A Buddhist monk wears a mask to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus as he collects alms in Chinatown at Bangkok, Thailand. Reuters
  • Airport officials wait to screen the temperature of passengers in order to detect a possible coronavirus infection, at Cairo International Airport, in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
    Airport officials wait to screen the temperature of passengers in order to detect a possible coronavirus infection, at Cairo International Airport, in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
  • Turkish, Azeri and Georgian evacuees dressed in protective suits and wearing masks leave a Turkish military cargo plane as they are flanked by medical workers upon their arrival from China's Wuhan in Ankara, Turkey. Reuters
    Turkish, Azeri and Georgian evacuees dressed in protective suits and wearing masks leave a Turkish military cargo plane as they are flanked by medical workers upon their arrival from China's Wuhan in Ankara, Turkey. Reuters
  • Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) unit soldiers prepare for the arrival of forty-two evacuees from Turkey, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Albania arriving by plane from coronavirus hit Wuhan, China, at the airport in Ankara, Turkey. EPA
    Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) unit soldiers prepare for the arrival of forty-two evacuees from Turkey, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Albania arriving by plane from coronavirus hit Wuhan, China, at the airport in Ankara, Turkey. EPA
  • Ambulances and medics wait for the arrival of 42 people from Turkey, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Albania on a Turkish Air Force cargo plane at the Etimesgut military Airport in Ankara after being repatriated from the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the new coronavirus outbreak. AFP
    Ambulances and medics wait for the arrival of 42 people from Turkey, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Albania on a Turkish Air Force cargo plane at the Etimesgut military Airport in Ankara after being repatriated from the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the new coronavirus outbreak. AFP
  • A person holds a child as passengers grab their luggages as they disembark a Turkish cargo plane at the Etimesgut military Airport in Ankara after being repatriated from the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the new coronavirus outbreak. AFP
    A person holds a child as passengers grab their luggages as they disembark a Turkish cargo plane at the Etimesgut military Airport in Ankara after being repatriated from the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the new coronavirus outbreak. AFP
  • Airport officials screen the temperature of passengers in order to detect a possible coronavirus infection, at Cairo International Airport, in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
    Airport officials screen the temperature of passengers in order to detect a possible coronavirus infection, at Cairo International Airport, in Cairo, Egypt. EPA
  • A Vietnamese family wearing protective face masks walk outside a railway station in Hanoi. AFP
    A Vietnamese family wearing protective face masks walk outside a railway station in Hanoi. AFP
  • A citizen receives directions from a quarantine official at the National Medical Centre, where the 13th patient infected with the novel coronavirus is being treated, in Seoul, South Korea. EPA
    A citizen receives directions from a quarantine official at the National Medical Centre, where the 13th patient infected with the novel coronavirus is being treated, in Seoul, South Korea. EPA
  • A leukaemia patient and her mother coming from Hubei province cross a checkpoint at the Jiujiang Yangtze River Bridge in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province, China, as the country is hit by an outbreak of a new coronavirus. Reuters
    A leukaemia patient and her mother coming from Hubei province cross a checkpoint at the Jiujiang Yangtze River Bridge in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province, China, as the country is hit by an outbreak of a new coronavirus. Reuters
  • A mother reacts as she pleads with police to allow her daughter to pass a checkpoint for cancer treatment after she arrived from Hubei province at the Jiujiang Yangtze River Bridge in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province, China, as the country is hit by an outbreak of a new coronavirus. Reuters
    A mother reacts as she pleads with police to allow her daughter to pass a checkpoint for cancer treatment after she arrived from Hubei province at the Jiujiang Yangtze River Bridge in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province, China, as the country is hit by an outbreak of a new coronavirus. Reuters

Coronavirus: Etihad and Emirates will continue to operate flights to China


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UAE airlines will continue to operate flights to and from China, amid growing concerns about the spread of the new coronavirus globally.

Etihad and Emirates confirmed on Sunday that their operations remain unaffected after many international airlines suspended their flights.

British Airways, Lufthansa, Qantas, Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, United Airlines and others all halted flights to China.

Regionally, Qatar Airways, Saudi Arabian Airlines and Oman Air have all also suspended direct flights.

Qatar Airways announced on Saturday via Twitter it would suspend flights to China, citing “significant operational challenges.”

Saudia, as the airline is known, said on Sunday it would halt its operations to the Asian nation that evening, according to a tweet on its official Twitter account.

Oman Air, which operates four flights a week between Muscat and Guangzhou, will suspend the route from Monday, following directives from Oman’s Public Authority for civil aviation, according to its Twitter account.

On Friday, Etihad announced the temporary suspension of passenger flights between Chinese capital Beijing and Japanese city Nagoya "due to low demand". The airline's daily flights to Beijing will continue, it said.

An Etihad spokeswoman said on Sunday that flights from Abu Dhabi to mainland China and Hong Kong "continue to operate normally, following the World Health Organisation's recommendation that normal travel and trade with China should continue".

"The safety and well-being of its passengers and employees is the highest priority of Etihad Airways, which continues to collaborate with authorities and industry partners, and to independently monitor global action to help address this issue."

On Saturday, the UAE announced a fifth case of coronavirus had been diagnosed in a patient who arrived in the country from Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak.

The new case brings the total number of infections in the UAE to five after four members of a family on holiday, from Wuhan, tested positive for the virus.

It is not known where the cases were diagnosed in the UAE or where the patients are being treated.

All five patients are said to be in a stable condition.

On Friday, the World Health Organisation declared the outbreak of the Wuhan virus – which has been called 2019-nCoV – a global emergency. New cases were being reported every hour.

There are now 14,543 confirmed cases, the vast majority of which are in China. In total, at least 305 people have died.

The Philippines reported its first death from the virus on Sunday after a 44-year-old Chinese man from Wuhan succumbed to the disease.

It is the first confirmed death outside of mainland China.

Countries across the world have advised their citizens not to travel to China, including the US State Department, which also urged those already there to leave.

A number of countries also temporarily barred entry to foreigners travelling from China, including Singapore, Vietnam, Mongolia, Australia and New Zealand.

The virus results in pneumonia and has killed around 2 per cent of the people it has infected so far, according to current estimates.