Coronavirus: EasyJet passengers will be required to wear masks
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EasyJet has said it will resume some flights on 15 June, with all passengers and cabin crew told to wear face masks to protect against the coronavirus.
The airline announced that it would restart a "small number" of routes where there is enough customer demand.
The initial schedule will include domestic routes across the UK and France.
Easyjet will require customers to wear face coverings and they will be expected to provide their own.
From June, EasyJet will fly between UK airports including Gatwick, Bristol, Birmingham, Liverpool, Newcastle, Edinburgh and Belfast.
The airline told the BBC that from mid-June it would be running 189 flights per week on average.
The only international service from the UK will fly from Gatwick to Nice.
Elsewhere, some services will resume between Portugal, Switzerland and Spain.
EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren said that "these are small and carefully planned steps".
Which EasyJet services will resume from June?
UK
Belfast-Birmingham
Belfast-Bristol
Belfast-Edinburgh
Belfast-Glasgow
Belfast-London Gatwick
Belfast-Liverpool
Belfast-Newcastle
Birmingham-Belfast
Bristol-Belfast
Edinburgh-Belfast
Edinburgh-London Gatwick
Glasgow-Belfast
Glasgow-London Gatwick
Inverness-London Gatwick
Isle of Man-London Gatwick
Isle of Man-Liverpool
London Gatwick-Belfast
London Gatwick-Edinburgh
London Gatwick-Glasgow
London Gatwick-Inverness
London Gatwick-Isle of Man
London Gatwick-Nice
Liverpool-Belfast
Liverpool-Isle of Man
Newcastle-Belfast
France
Bordeaux-Lyon
Bordeaux-Nice
Paris Charles de Gaulle-Nice
Paris Charles de Gaulle-Toulouse
Lille-Nice
Lyon-Bordeaux
Lyon-Nantes
Nice-Bordeaux
Nice-Paris Charles de Gaulle
Nice-London Gatwick
Nice-Lille
Nice-Nantes
Nice-Toulouse
Nice-Geneva
Nantes-Lyon
Nantes-Nice
Toulouse-Paris Charles de Gaulle
Toulouse-Nice
Switzerland
Geneva-Porto
Geneva-Barcelona
Geneva-Lisbon
Geneva-Nice
Spain
Barcelona-Geneva
Portugal
Porto-Geneva
Lisbon-Geneva
Mr Lundgren said that further routes would be announced over the coming weeks "as customer demand increases and lockdown measures across Europe are relaxed".
The firm grounded its entire fleet in March as global travel came to a near-halt.
When flights restart, no food will be available on board and customers will have hand sanitiser and disinfectant wipes provided.
EasyJet said that its aircraft would also be subject to "enhanced cleaning and disinfection".
Mr Lundgren said: "These measures will remain in place for as long as is needed to ensure customers and crew are able to fly safely as the world continues to recover from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic."
New health standards
The new rules were drawn up according to latest government advice and in consultation with aviation authorities such as the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA).
On Wednesday, EASA and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) issued a new set of health standards for airlines hoping to start flying again.
They recommend wearing face masks, physical distancing of 1.5m where possible in airports and washing hands often.
They stopped short of calling for social distancing on planes due to the confined space, but added that other measures should be followed at all times.
'Flying safely again'
Meanwhile, Heathrow Airport will start using thermal cameras to carry out temperature checks in a trial on some passengers from its Terminal 2 on Thursday.
Its chief executive, John Holland-Kaye, told the BBC's Today programme that this measure was already being used in many countries around the world.
"It will help us to understand whether this could be part of a common international standard to get people flying safely again," he said.
Several other airlines have indicated that they are considering resuming flights in the next few months.
Ryanair chief executive Michael O'Leary has said that the airline plans to ramp up flights in July when British Airways will also resume some flights.
EasyJet's announcement followed the admission earlier this week that a "highly sophisticated cyber-attack" had affected about nine million of its customers.
It said email addresses and travel details had been stolen and that 2,208 customers had also had their credit and debit card details "accessed".
The firm first became aware of the attack in January, and has informed the UK's Information Commissioner's Office while it investigates the breach.
- Published20 May 2020
- Published19 May 2020