
Audio By Carbonatix
Eritrean authorities have suspended all flights by Ethiopian Airlines to the East African nation effective Sept. 30, the airline said on Wednesday.
Flights from Ethiopia to Eritrea had resumed in 2018 after two decades, following a peace deal between the two neighbours that earned Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed a Nobel peace prize a year later.
"Ethiopian Airlines has received a notice from the Eritrean Civil Aviation Authority through a letter... indicating the suspension of all Ethiopian Airlines flights to Eritrea, effective September 30, 2024," the airline said in a statement posted on its official Facebook page.
"The specific reasons for this suspension have not been disclosed to us," it said.
Eritrea Information Minister Yemane Gebremeskel did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Hanna Atnafu, a spokesperson for the airline, told Reuters the flight suspension came as a surprise.
"What is shocking and saddening to our airlines was just 15 days ago, on July 8, there was a letter sent to (us) requesting, to increase our weekly flight frequency from 10 flights to 15," Hanna said.
State-owned Ethiopian Airlines is ranked the largest in Africa by revenue and profit by the global industry body International Air Transport Association.
Latest Stories
-
Nurse laureate launches Cancer Care Africa Foundation to tackle late diagnosis, workforce gaps
58 minutes -
Ghana to lose GH¢18.15bn in revenue by 2027 from abolishing Covid levy, E-levy – CPS study
1 hour -
Reintroduce scrapped taxes to close revenue gap – Tax expert
1 hour -
GRA applauds CPS study, urges continuous policy scrutiny
2 hours -
Wear blue or green hat to survive – IBAG president says insurance industry ‘captured by politics’
2 hours -
AGI commends government’s move to resolve the power crisis in Volta and Oti Regions
2 hours -
Broker sector worse hit by state interference – IBAG president reveals
2 hours -
IBAG president alleges political interference driving kickbacks in insurance sector
3 hours -
Trump agrees to two-week ceasefire, Iran says safe passage through Hormuz possible
3 hours -
Dozens killed as Angola flood death toll rises
3 hours -
Russia confirms deaths of 16 Cameroonians fighting in Ukraine war, Yaounde says
3 hours -
Plan to scrap presidential elections puts Zimbabweans at loggerheads
3 hours -
Guinea-Bissau transporters strike over higher fuel prices
4 hours -
Iran ceasefire deal a partial win for Trump – but at a high cost
4 hours -
Oil slides below $100 after Trump announces two-week ceasefire
4 hours