There have been more Covid-related flight cancellations globally as the week starts, capping off a miserable festive period for thousands of people. More than 1,400 flights have been scrapped, with Chinese and US destinations being the worst hit. US airlines say the disruption is due to crews testing positive or isolating. Hong Kong is banning all South Korea’s Korean Air flights for two weeks, after positive cases among some arrivals. In all, more than 8,000 flights have been grounded over the long Christmas weekend that began on Friday.
Although the number of cancellations is a small percentage of the total, it is higher than normal and comes at a time of year when many are traveling to spend time with family and friends. In a separate development, US authorities are monitoring dozens of cruise ships hit by Covid cases while sailing in the country’s waters, with several of them reportedly denied port in the Caribbean. Recorded Covid cases are rising sharply around the world, largely driven by the Omicron variant.
Despite early findings that Omicron is milder than other coronavirus variants, scientists are concerned by the sheer number of infections being recorded. The majority of the flights canceled on Monday are those by Chinese companies. They include China Eastern, which canceled 368 flights, and Air China, with 141 cancellations.
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Airports in Beijing and Shanghai appear to be the worst affected, with nearly 300 cancellations combined. The Chinese authorities have not commented on the issue. The airport in the northern Chinese city of Xi’an is also on the list. More than 13 million people in the city have been recently ordered to stay at home as authorities attempt to tackle a Covid outbreak there.
Meanwhile, the worst-hit US companies are United, with 84 cancellations, and JetBlue which had 66. United warned last week that a spike in Omicron cases had risen. Omicron now is the dominant strain in the US. In the UK, British Airways has 42 cancellations on Monday, according to FlightAware. London’s Heathrow airport has 47 scrapped flights. Nearly 5.4 million people have died with coronavirus worldwide, according to America’s Johns Hopkins University. There have been almost 280 million confirmed cases.