Weigh to Go: Korean Air to Ask Passengers to Stand on Scales Before Boarding
South Korea’s flagship airline Korean Air will soon ask passengers to weigh themselves and their carry-ons before boarding, citing the need to comply with government laws.
South Korea’s flagship airline Korean Air will soon ask passengers to weigh themselves and their carry-ons before boarding, citing the need to comply with government laws.
Rep. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), who is running for Sen. Jim Inhofe’s (R-OK) open Senate seat, is set to introduce a bill limiting the government’s ability to mandate mask-wearing during air travel.
A spokeswoman for President-elect Joe Biden said that the incoming administration will not lift the travel ban on the UK, Europe, and Brazil.
Arm doors and cross check. A flight attendant living in enforced coronavirus isolation has made a video to record the experience that has been viewed more than 1.6 million times.
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — New security screenings for all passengers on U.S.-bound flights began on Thursday, with airlines worldwide questioning flyers about their trip and their luggage in the latest Trump administration decision affecting global travel.
While Middle Eastern airlines grapple with carry-on bans for laptops on flights to the US and Britain, one carrier is encouraging passengers to do the unthinkable: actually talk to each other.
Even in Israel, renowned for its aviation security, a carry-on electronics ban on flights to the United States and Britain from parts of the Middle East and North Africa had a former airport security chief shaking his head on Wednesday.
The United States warned Tuesday that extremists plan to target passenger jets with bombs hidden in electronic devices, and banned carrying them onto flights from 10 Middle East airports.
As part of an overall transition toward boosting self-service at Ben-Gurion Airport, passengers will soon be able to check into flights with boarding passes on their mobile phones, the Israel Airports Authority announced on Monday.
The Jerusalem Post reports: Dismissing reports that it discriminated against Jewish passengers in Spain, the British low-cost airline EasyJet accused the complainants of rowdy behavior that caused a delay.