BERLIN / Reuters
Emirates will press ahead with plans to launch flights on Sunday to Newark in the United States via Greece, despite attempts by members of the US Congress to block the route, the airline’s president said.
Twenty-five members of Congress have written to US President Donald Trump asking him to stop the flight over accusations Emirates and other Middle East airlines have violated the US open skies agreement.
“We’re not changing it. We have breached no terms of the air service agreement that allows us to do that,” Emirates President Tim Clark told reporters at the ITB travel fair in Berlin.
Major US carriers Delta Air Lines, American Airlines Group Inc and United Continental Holdings Inc have campaigned for more than two years to get the US government to intervene in a dispute over subsidies. The US airlines say Emirates, Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways have received $50 billion in state subsidies in violation of the US open skies air services agreement. The Gulf airlines have repeatedly
denied the accusations.
The latest Emirates route is contentious for some because it will stop to pick up passengers in Athens on its way to Newark from Dubai, its second so-called fifth freedom flight to the United States.
Fifth freedom flights are where an airline from one country operates between two different countries, the other Emirates flight to the United States being its route to New York which stops to pick up passengers in Milan.
Trump acknowledged at a White House meeting with U.S. aviation executives on February 9 that U.S. carriers were under
pressure from foreign airlines.