Ex-UK defense secretary: Cancelation would have sent ‘totally the wrong message’ Decision to scrap Kuwait route remains ‘under review’ LONDON: British Airways has reversed a decision to scrap direct flights to Bahrain following a backlash, the Daily Mail reported. However, flights to nearby Kuwait are still set to be suspended in March as part of previous plans aimed at tackling financially unviable flights at the airline. Earlier this month, the Mail reported that BA had planned to cancel the Bahrain and Kuwait routes after almost a century of service. The Gulf states have long had close ties to Britain, and the decision reportedly angered officials in Manama. Airline staff who served on the two routes were also set to lose their jobs. Though the Kuwait route axing remains “under review,” the initial decision to cancel the Bahrain route would have sent “totally the wrong message” about the UK’s diplomatic stance toward the Gulf region, former Defense Secretary Liam Fox told the Mail. Thousands of residents in Bahrain with close ties to the UK launched a petition demanding that the route remain available. Bahrain hosts a Royal Navy base at Mina Salman Port, and the country has long had close commercial and trade ties with the UK. BA said in a statement: “Following discussions with our partners and stakeholders, we can confirm we will operate a service between London Heathrow and Bahrain International Airport three times a week from the start of the summer 2025 season. This will increase to a daily service from the start of the Winter 2025 season.” BA’s predecessor Imperial Airways first launched flights to Bahrain in 1971. Manama became a key financial hub in the Gulf partly due to the presence of London-based Standard Chartered, which set up the country’s first bank in 1920. Bahrain’s sovereign wealth fund, the Mumtalakat, owns McLaren, the UK luxury automotive manufacturer. The fund plans to expand its British holdings through a series of investments, the Mail reported earlier this year. The UK is also negotiating a free trade deal with the Gulf Cooperation Council, which includes Bahrain and Kuwait. The six GCC countries combined represent the UK’s fourth-largest export market after the US, the EU and China. Mohamed Yousif Al-Binfalah, chief of the Bahrain Airport Co., said: “We are delighted to witness British Airways continue operations at Bahrain International Airport. “As the oldest airline operating out of Bahrain for over 92 years, the enduring partnership with British Airways is a testament to our shared commitment to excellence.”
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