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This photo provided by Incheon International Airport shows a corporation official, left, posing with two Japanese visitors who arrived at the Incheon airport via the resumed late-night regular flight from Tokyo's Haneda International Airport, March 27. Yonhap |
Korean Air resumed regular late-night flights between Incheon International Airport, the gateway to Seoul, and Tokyo's Haneda International Airport on Monday, three years after they were suspended due to COVID-19.
The flight departs from Haneda at 2 a.m. and arrives at Incheon at 4:35 a.m. seven times a week, according to Incheon International Airport.
It is expected to meet the travel demand from Japanese office workers who want to visit Korea for a one-day trip or a short weekend trip, the corporation said, forecasting an additional increase of 153,000 visitors, including 67,000 transfer passengers, a year.
Meanwhile, Korea Airports said flights between Seoul's Gimpo International Airport and two Chinese destinations ― Beijing and Shanghai ― fully resumed Sunday after a three-year suspension due to the pandemic.
Korean Air, Asiana Airlines and four other Chinese airlines operate a total of 112 flights per week in the Gimpo-Beijing and Gimpo-Shanghai routes, restoring their pre-COVID-19 levels, the corporation said.
With the resumption of flights to and from Beijing and Shanghai, all five international routes from Gimpo have been restored, the corporation noted. Flights between Gimpo and Haneda resumed in June last year. (Yonhap)